Axonal conduction velocity varies according to the level of preceding impulse activity. In unmyelinated axons this typically results in a slowing of conduction velocity and a parallel increase in threshold. It is currently held that Na + -K + -ATPase-dependent axonal hyperpolarization is responsible for this slowing but this has long been equivocal. We therefore examined conduction velocity changes during repetitive activation of single unmyelinated axons innervating the rat cranial meninges. In direct contradiction to the currently accepted postulate, Na + -K + -ATPase blockade actually enhanced activity-induced conduction velocity slowing, while the degree of velocity slowing was curtailed in the presence of lidocaine (10-300 μM) and carbamazepine (30-500 μM) but not tetrodotoxin (TTX, 10-80 nM). This suggests that a change in the number of available sodium channels is the most prominent factor responsible for activity-induced changes in conduction velocity in unmyelinated axons. At moderate stimulus frequencies, axonal conduction velocity is determined by an interaction between residual sodium channel inactivation following each impulse and the retrieval of channels from inactivation by a concomitant Na + -K + -ATPase-mediated hyperpolarization. Since the process is primarily dependent upon sodium channel availability, tracking conduction velocity provides a means of accessing relative changes in the excitability of nociceptive neurons.
Headaches can be evoked by activation of meningeal nociceptors, but an involvement of pericranial tissues is debated. We aimed to examine a possible extracranial innervation by meningeal afferents in the rat. For in vivo neuronal tracing, dextran amines were applied to the periosteum underlying the temporal muscle. Labeling was observed 2 days later in the parietal dura mater, trigeminal ganglion, and spinal trigeminal nucleus with confocal and electron microscopy. In the hemisected rat head, extracellular recordings were made from meningeal nerve fibers. Release of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) from the cranial dura mater during noxious stimulation of pericranial muscles was quantified. In vivo capsaicin was injected into the temporal muscle while meningeal blood flow was recorded. In the parietal dura mater, labeled C- and Aδ fibers ramified extensively, accompanied the middle meningeal artery, and passed through the spinosus nerve into the maxillary and mandibular, but not the ophthalmic division of the trigeminal ganglion. Some fibers could be traced into the ipsilateral spinal trigeminal nucleus. Electrophysiological recordings revealed afferent fibers with mechanosensitive receptive fields both in the dura mater and in the parietal periosteum. Noxious stimulation of the temporal muscle caused CGRP release from the dura mater and elevated meningeal blood flow. Collaterals of meningeal nerve fibers project through the skull, forming functional connections between extra- and intracranial tissues. This finding offers a new explanation of how noxious stimulation of pericranial tissues can directly influence meningeal nociception associated with headache generation and why manual therapies of pericranial muscles may be useful in headaches.
Objective.-To reinvestigate the innervation pattern of the dura mater of rat and human middle cranial fossa, the morpho-functional substrate of headache generation, and adjacent extracranial tissues with neuronal in vitro tracing.Background.-This study was initiated by recent structural and functional findings of meningeal afferent fibers which innervate the cranial dura mater and may project to extracranial tissues.Methods.-Anterograde and retrograde neuronal in vitro tracing was made in formaldehyde fixed hemisected rat and human skulls. The fluorescent tracer DiI was applied to proximally cut meningeal nerves in rat and to distal branches of the spinosus nerve in human calvaria lined by dura mater. After several weeks, the dura mater and deep extracranial tissues were examined with fluorescence microscopy.Results.-In addition to a network of meningeal nerve fibers, several fiber bundles were observed, leaving the skull through emissary canals and fissures to innervate the pericranial temporal, parietal, and occipital periosteum. Traced fibers were seen spreading into deep layers of the temporal and upper neck muscles. Retrograde neuronal tracing revealed labeled cell bodies exclusively in the mandibular and maxillary division of the rat trigeminal ganglion, and centrally projecting fibers were identified in the spinal trigeminal tract. Electron microscopy of the cross-sected spinosus nerve showed myelinated and unmyelinated axons with similar numbers in human and rat.Conclusions.-We conclude that a proportion of meningeal afferents innervates extracranial tissues like periosteum and pericranial muscles via collaterals projecting through the skull. These afferents may be nociceptive, some may subserve proprioceptive functions. The finding of extracranial projections of meningeal afferents may be important for our understanding of extracranial impacts on headache generation and therapy.
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