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Volume 17, Number 9, Issue of May 1, 1997 pp. 3274-3284
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience

Morphology and Distribution of Spinothalamic Lamina I Neurons in the Monkey

Received Sept. 27, 1996; revised Feb. 6, 1997; accepted Feb. 10, 1997.

En-Tan Zhang and A. D. Craig

Division of Neurobiology, Barrow Neurological Institute, Phoenix, Arizona 85013

Lamina I spinothalamic tract (STT) neurons were identified by retrograde labeling with cholera toxin subunit b (CTb) in monkeys. On the basis of the criteria of somatal shape and dendritic orientation in horizontal sections used in prior work in the cat, three distinct morphological types were recognized: fusiform (F) cells with spindle-shaped somata and two main longitudinal dendritic arbors; pyramidal (P) cells with triangular somata and three main dendrites oriented primarily longitudinally; and multipolar (M) cells with polygonal somata and four or more dendrites directed longitudinally and mediolaterally. Some cells had transitional shapes, but cells with indeterminate shapes and a few with small round, unipolar, or eccentric somata were grouped as unclassified (U). Greater variation appeared in the monkey than had been seen in the cat, and more subtypes were noted. The overall proportions of these cell types were: 47% F, 27% P, 22% M, and 5% U. Differential longitudinal distributions were found over the length of the spinal cord (from the second cervical through the first coccygeal segments). Pyramidal and multipolar cells together predominated in the enlargements, whereas fusiform cells predominated in thoracic segments. We conclude that three distinct morphological types of lamina I STT cells are present in the monkey as in the cat. Considered with other recent findings, the present results support the possibility that these three cell types may correspond to distinct physiological classes of nociceptive and thermoreceptive lamina I STT cells.

Key words: dorsal horn; spinothalamic; sensory neurons; nociception; thermoreception; functional specialization




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