Further Evidence that the Septum is not part of the Main Pathway of the Milk Ejection Reflex in the Rat

J Neuroendocrinol. 1991 Apr 1;3(2):199-204. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2826.1991.tb00263.x.

Abstract

Abstract The possible role of the medial septum in the control of oxytocin release and of the milk ejection reflex induced by suckling was investigated in lactating rats by using electrical stimulations and lesions. In anaesthetized animals, brief electrical stimulation of the medial septum at 5 to 50 Hz elicited a single brief milk ejection similar to natural reflex milk ejections, whereas prolonged low frequency stimulations (5 to 10 Hz) induced a prolonged inhibition of the reflex. In acute experiments under anaesthesia, lesions of the medial septum did not impair the amplitude and pattern of reflex milk ejections. In chronic experiments, lesions of the medial septum resulted first in a loss of body weight of the mothers and a parallel reduction in growth of the litters. After a few days, the litters gained weight normally, and the pattern of milk ejections was normal. Thus, the pathways which pass through or originate from the medial septum and which are excitatory for oxytocin release appear not to be involved in the regulation of the milk ejection reflex. In view of these results and those from our previous study on the lateral septum, we conclude that the whole septum is not essential to the milk ejection reflex. However, the effects of septal stimulation suggest that the medial and lateral septum may be involved in a secondary neural circuitry that can inhibit the reflex.