Ventral Root Afferent and Dorsal Root Efferent Fibres in Dog and Human Lower Sacral Nerve Roots

1992 
Two pairs of wire electrodes were used to record single afferent action potentials from ventral roots and single efferent action potentials from dorsal roots of dogs and humans. A human lower sacral ventral root contained about 20 to 30% afferents among fibres with a diameter larger than 5 fim; a comparable ventral root of a dog con­ tained about 1% afferents. Human S3, S4 and S5 dorsal roots contained 3, 18, and 20 to 30% efferent fibres respectively; a comparable dorsal root of the dog contained less than 1% efferent fibres. Primary and secondary muscle spindle afferents, Golgi tendon organ afferents, and afferents from the mechanoreceptors of the urinary bladder and anal canal mucosa were activated in a dog ventral root by pulling bladder and anal catheters. Their peak group conduction velocities were 82, 57, 71 and 18 m/s at 34°C respec­ tively. The dog afferents conducted more than 30% faster than did comparable human nerve fibres. By strongly pulling the bladder catheter, the static human dorsal root 721- motoneurons increased their activity for about 7 s which in turn strongly increased the dorsal root spindle afferent activity for more than 10 min; the human static intrafusal 7-motoneurons seemed to show cumulative properties.
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