Literature DB >> 16129982

Isoflurane disrupts central pattern generator activity and coordination in the lamprey isolated spinal cord.

Steven L Jinks1, Richard J Atherley, Carmen L Dominguez, Karen A Sigvardt, Joseph F Antognini.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although volatile anesthetics such as isoflurane can depress sensory and motor neurons in the spinal cord, movement occurring during anesthesia can be coordinated, involving multiple limbs as well as the head and trunk. However, it is unclear whether volatile anesthetics depress locomotor interneurons comprising central pattern generators or disrupt intersegmental central pattern generator coordination.
METHODS: Lamprey spinal cords were excised during anesthesia and placed in a bath containing artificial cerebrospinal fluid and D-glutamate to induce fictive swimming. The rostral, middle, and caudal regions were bath-separated using acrylic partitions and petroleum jelly, and in each compartment, the authors recorded ventral root activity. The authors selectively delivered isoflurane (0.5, 1, and 1.5%) only to the middle segments of the spinal cord. Spectral analyses were then used to assess isoflurane effects on central pattern generator activity and coordination.
RESULTS: Isoflurane dose-dependently reduced fictive locomotor activity in all three compartments, with 1.5% isoflurane nearly eliminating activity in the middle compartment and reducing spectral amplitudes in the anesthetic-free rostral and caudal compartments to 23% and 31% of baseline, respectively. Isoflurane decreased burst frequency in the caudal compartment only, to 53% of baseline. Coordination of central pattern generator activity between the rostral and caudal compartments was also dose-dependently decreased, to 42% of control at 1.5% isoflurane.
CONCLUSION: Isoflurane disrupts motor output by reducing interneuronal central pattern generator activity in the spinal cord. The effects of isoflurane on motor output outside the site of isoflurane application were presumably independent of effects on sensory or motor neurons.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16129982     DOI: 10.1097/00000542-200509000-00020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anesthesiology        ISSN: 0003-3022            Impact factor:   7.892


  16 in total

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3.  Propofol produces immobility via action in the ventral horn of the spinal cord by a GABAergic mechanism.

Authors:  Gudrun Kungys; Jongbun Kim; Steven L Jinks; Richard J Atherley; Joseph F Antognini
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4.  Anesthetic effects on fictive locomotion in the rat isolated spinal cord.

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5.  Volatile anesthetic effects on midbrain-elicited locomotion suggest that the locomotor network in the ventral spinal cord is the primary site for immobility.

Authors:  Steven L Jinks; Milo Bravo; Shawn G Hayes
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7.  Validation and insights of anesthetic action in an early vertebrate network: the isolated lamprey spinal cord.

Authors:  Steven L Jinks; Jason Andrada
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8.  Neurons in the ventral spinal cord are more depressed by isoflurane, halothane, and propofol than are neurons in the dorsal spinal cord.

Authors:  JongBun Kim; Aubrey Yao; Richard Atherley; Earl Carstens; Steven L Jinks; Joseph F Antognini
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9.  Brainstem regions affecting minimum alveolar concentration and movement pattern during isoflurane anesthesia.

Authors:  Steven L Jinks; Milo Bravo; Omar Satter; Yuet-Ming Chan
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Review 10.  Is a new paradigm needed to explain how inhaled anesthetics produce immobility?

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