Neuronal responses in rostral trigeminal brain-stem nuclei of macaque monkeys after chronic trigeminal tractotomy

Abstract
✓ Unilateral trigeminal tractotomy was carried out at the level of the obex, just rostral to the subnucleus caudalis, in five young adult Macaca fascicularis monkeys. The animals had been trained previously to perform a behavioral shock avoidance task in response to electrical stimulation of dental pulp and facial skin. Tractotomy produced an elevation in the stimulus strength which elicited escape behavior when facial skin was stimulated but not when the tooth pulp was stimulated. Unit activity, evoked by electrical stimulation of the tooth pulp and facial skin as well as innocuous and noxious mechanical stimulation of orofacial regions, was recorded from neurons in the trigeminal main sensory nucleus and the subnuclei oralis and interpolaris of the spinal nucleus 8 to 12 weeks after tractotomy. Primary afferent input to these nuclei is unaffected by the tractotomy which is located more caudally. The tractotomy interrupts primary afferent input into the trigeminal nucleus caudalis and also intranuclear c...