| Literature DB >> 131330 |
Abstract
Development of the response of the auditory cortex to unilateral acoustic stimulation by a chick was studied in guinea-pig foetuses from the 50th day to the end of gestation and in newborn animals. The first cortical response appeared on the 52nd to 53rd day of gestation. The maximum responses were concentrated in the temporal cortex, between the somatosensory (parietal) and optic (occipital) area. The progressive development of the latent period of the cortical response and of its various components distinctly slowed down on the last days of gestation. At the same time, the amplitude of the cortical response was temporarily augmented. The cortical response developed from a simple negative wave in the youngest embryos into an intricate complex with an initial positive component in newborn guinea-pigs. The basic components of this complex were already discernible on the 64th to 65th day of gestation. The ability to react to repeated peripheral stimulation of 0.1-2 c/s frequency increased with foetal age, with temporary deterioration on the last days of gestation. Resistance of the cortical auditory response to cerebral anoxia rose up to term, with a temporary drop from the 64th day of gestation. After the initiation of independent respiration, cerebral hypoxia and bilateral vagotomy chiefly influenced the stability of the more recent components of the cortical auditory response in mature foetuses.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1976 PMID: 131330
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Physiol Bohemoslov ISSN: 0369-9463