2003
DOI: 10.1016/s0006-3495(03)75024-3
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Electrical Excitability of the Soma of Sensory Neurons Is Required for Spike Invasion of the Soma, but Not for Through-Conduction

Abstract: The cell soma of primary sensory neurons is electrically excitable, and is invaded by action potentials as they pass from the peripheral nerve, past the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) and toward the spinal cord. However, there are virtually no synapses in the DRG, and no signal processing is known to occur there. Why, then, are DRG cell somata excitable? We have constructed and validated an explicit model of the primary sensory neuron and used it to explore the role of electrical excitability of the cell soma in a… Show more

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Cited by 90 publications
(99 citation statements)
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“…This polisegmentary mixed nerve directly re-enters the spinal canal and gives off ascending and descending anastomosing branches comprising both somatic and autonomic fibers for the posterolateral annulus, the posterior vertebral body and the periostium, and the ventral meninges 30, 31 . The sinuvertebral nerves connect with branches from radicular levels both above and below the point of entry, in addition to the contralateral side, meaning that localizing pain from involvement of these nerves is challenging 32 . Also, the facet joints receive two-level innervation comprising somatic and autonomic components.…”
Section: Anatomy Of the Low Backmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This polisegmentary mixed nerve directly re-enters the spinal canal and gives off ascending and descending anastomosing branches comprising both somatic and autonomic fibers for the posterolateral annulus, the posterior vertebral body and the periostium, and the ventral meninges 30, 31 . The sinuvertebral nerves connect with branches from radicular levels both above and below the point of entry, in addition to the contralateral side, meaning that localizing pain from involvement of these nerves is challenging 32 . Also, the facet joints receive two-level innervation comprising somatic and autonomic components.…”
Section: Anatomy Of the Low Backmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During late embryonic development the proximal regions of the two processes coalesce into a T-shaped process and these neurons progressively become pseudounipolar such that by birth most of them are pseudounipolar (Matsuda et al, 1996). The pseudounipolar conformation appears to ensure as well as allow for modulation of the impulses being transmitted from the periphery to the central terminals of dorsal root ganglia sensory neurons (Amir and Devor, 2003a;Amir and Devor, 2003b;Devor, 1999). Within the dorsal root ganglia there are no synaptic contacts between neurons however, the somata have microvilli that appear to contribute to the observed interactions between the neuronal somata and between neuronal somata and their surrounding satellite glia cells (Pannese, 2002;Takeda et al, 2009).…”
Section: Dorsal Root Ganglia Morphologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…chronic pain or 'phantom' itch) [1]. Although main somatosensory integration and processing is performed by CNS, growing evidence suggest that peripheral neurons themselves can communicate with each other, both electrically and chemically [2,3,4]. Accordingly, cell bodies of sensory neurons express various receptors for classical neurotransmitters such as acetylcholine, glutamate and GABA [5].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%