The central release of acetylcholine during consciousness and after brain lesions

Abstract
Acetylcholine (ACh) has been collected from the visual cortex of anaesthetized rabbits during stimulation of the lateral genlculate body and after cutting various central nervous pathways. ACh has also been collected from the visual cortex of conscious, free-moving rabbits. After a unilateral vertical lesion, separating the geniculate body from more centrally situated nuclei, ACh release, evoked from the contralateral cortex by geniculate body stimulation, was abolished, but evoked release from the ipsilateral cortex was only reduced. After a bilateral horizontal lesion separating the thalamic nuclei from the reticular formation, unilateral geniculate stimulation gave an increased ACh release from the ipsilateral but not from the contralateral visual cortex. The vertical and horizontal lesions had no permanent effect on the spontaneous release of ACh from the visual cortex. Unilateral destruction of the geniculate body reduced the spontaneous release of ACh from the ipsilateral cortex but did not affect the contralateral release. The spontaneous and directly evoked ACh release from chronically undercut areas of cortex was found to be considerably lower than from intact areas of cortex. A high output of ACh was obtained from the visual cortex of conscious, free-moving rabbits. The rate of ACh release was closely related to the activity and state of arousal of the animals. The results support an earlier suggestion that 2 major ascending cholinergic systems exist in the rabbit brain. One pathway is the nonspecific reticulo-cortical tract responsible for cortical arousal and the other is the more specific thalamo-cortical pathway associated with augmenting and repetitive after-discharge responses. The functional significance of these 2 cholinergic pathways and their role in the conscious animal are discussed.