Labyrinthine Input to the Vestibular Nuclei of the Awake Cat

Abstract
The labyrinthine input to the vestibular nuclei was investigated in 24 awake cats. Stimulus consisted of electrical shocks given through bipolar silver wire electrodes, implanted in the utricular and lateral ampullar nerves. Throughout the vestibular nuclei, single units were recorded extracellularly with glass micropipettes filled with Fast Green. The tracts of the penetrating electrodes were identified histologically. In all four nuclei units responding to both labyrinths outnumbered unilaterally responding neurones with certain differences between the individual nuclei. Excitatory as well as inhibitory responses were observed, polysynaptic being more common than mono- or disynaptic ones. No mono-synaptic contralateral responses were seen. The latency distribution of contralateral responses closely mirrored that of ipsilateral responses within each nucleus. Both excitatory and inhibitory responses fell into relatively segregated populations, based upon latency distribution. This implies separate pathways for labyrinthine input to the vestibular nuclei.