R. Bortolami
University of Bologna
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Featured researches published by R. Bortolami.
The Journal of Physiology | 1999
Vito Enrico Pettorossi; G. Della Torre; R. Bortolami; Orazio Brunetti
1 The role of group III and IV afferent fibres of the lateral gastrocnemious muscle (LG) in modulating the homonymous monosynaptic reflex was investigated during muscle fatigue in spinalized rats. 2 Muscle fatigue was induced by a series of increasing tetanic electrical stimuli (85 Hz, 600 ms) delivered to the LG muscle nerve. Series consisted of increasing train numbers from 1 to 60. 3 Potentials from the spinal cord LG motor pool and from the ventral root were recorded in response to proprioceptive afferent stimulation and analysed before and during tetanic muscle activations. Both the pre‐ and postsynaptic waves showed an initial enhancement and, after a ‘12‐train’ series, an increasing inhibition. 4 The enhancement of the responses to muscle fatiguing stimulation disappeared after L3‐L6 dorsal root section, while a partial reflex inhibition was still present. Conversely, after section of the corresponding ventral root, there was only a reduction in the inhibitory effect. 5 The monosynaptic reflex was also studied in animals in which a large number of group III and IV muscle afferents were eliminated by injecting capsaicin (10 mM) into the LG muscle. As a result of capsaicin treatment, the fatigue‐induced inhibition of the pre‐ and postsynaptic waves disappeared, while the response enhancement remained. 6 We concluded that the monosynaptic reflex inhibition, but not the enhancement, was mediated by those group III and IV muscle afferents that are sensitive to the toxic action of capsaicin. The afferents that are responsible for the response enhancement enter the spinal cord through the dorsal root, while those responsible for the inhibition enter the spinal cord through both the ventral and dorsal roots.
Brain Research | 1996
Giovannella Della Torre; Maria Luisa Lucchi; Orazio Brunetti; Vito Enrico Pettorossi; Paolo Clavenzani; R. Bortolami
The entry pathway and central distribution of A delta and C muscle afferents within the central nervous system (CNS) were investigated by combining electron microscopy and electrophysiological analysis after intramuscular injection of capsaicin. The drug was injected into the rat lateral gastrocnemius (LG) and extraocular (EO) muscles. The compound action potentials of LG nerve and the evoked field potentials recorded in semilunar ganglion showed an immediate and permanent reduction in A delta and C components. The morphological data revealed degenerating unmyelinated axons and terminals in the inner sublamina II and in the border of laminae I-II of the dorsal horn at L4-L5 and C1-C2 (subnucleus caudalis trigemini) spinal cord segments. Most degenerating terminals were the central bouton (C) of type I and II synaptic glomeruli. Furthermore, degenerating peripheral axonal endings (V2) presynaptic to normal C were found. Since V2 were previously found degenerated after cutting the oculomotor nerve (ON) or L4 ventral root, we conclude that some A delta and C afferents from LG and EO muscles entering the CNS by ON or ventral roots make axoaxonic synapses on other primary afferents to promote an afferent control of sensory input.
Experimental Brain Research | 2003
Orazio Brunetti; Giovannella Della Torre; Maria Luisa Lucchi; Roberto Chiocchetti; R. Bortolami; Vito Enrico Pettorossi
The influence of muscle fatigue on the jaw-closing muscle spindle activity has been investigated by analyzing: (1) the field potentials evoked in the trigeminal motor nucleus (Vmot) by trigeminal mesencephalic nucleus (Vmes) stimulation, (2) the orthodromic and antidromic responses evoked in the Vmes by stimulation of the peripheral and central axons of the muscle proprioceptive afferents, and (3) the extracellular unitary discharge of masseter muscle spindles recorded in the Vmes. The masseter muscle was fatigued by prolonged tetanic masseter nerve electrical stimulation. Pre- and postsynaptic components of the potentials evoked in the Vmot showed a significant reduction in amplitude following muscle fatigue. Orthodromic and antidromic potentials recorded in the Vmes also showed a similar amplitude decrease. Furthermore, muscle fatigue caused a decrease of the discharge frequency of masseter muscle spindle afferents in most of the examined units. The inhibition of the potential amplitude and discharge frequency was strictly correlated with the extent of muscle fatigue and was mediated by the group III and IV afferent muscle fibers activated by fatigue. In fact, the inhibitory effect was abolished by capsaicin injection in the masseter muscle that provokes selective degeneration of small afferent muscle fibers containing neurokinins. We concluded that fatigue signals originating from the muscle and traveling through capsaicin-sensitive fibers are able to diminish the proprioceptive input by a central presynaptic influence. In the second part of the study, we examined the central projection of the masseter small afferents sensitive to capsaicin at the electron-microscopic level. Fiber degeneration was induced by injecting capsaicin into the masseter muscle. Degenerating terminals were found on the soma and stem process in Vmes and on the dendritic tree of neurons in Vmot. This suggests that small muscle afferents may influence the muscle spindle activity through direct synapses on somata in Vmes and on dendrites of neurons in Vmot.
Brain Research | 1998
Atanassios Dovas; Maria Luisa Lucchi; R. Bortolami; Annamaria Grandis; Angela R Palladino; Elisa Banelli; Mauro Carretta; Franco Magni; Nazareno Paolocci
The origin and course of efferent vagal fibers, which innervate the rat thymus, were investigated by a fluorescent retrograde double labeling method, using Fast blue (FB) and Diamidino yellow dihydrochloride (DY) as tracers. In the same animal, one tracer was injected into the cranial portion of the right lobe of the thymus and the other dye was deposited around the cut end of the right recurrent laryngeal nerve. The neuronal population giving origin to the recurrent nerve was mapped by using retrograde labeling with HRP applied to the central stump of the nerve. The HRP retrograde axonal transport showed that most efferent vagal fibers of the recurrent nerve have their perikarya in the nucleus retroambigualis (NRA), nucleus ambiguus (NA), and to a lesser extent in the nucleus retrofacialis (NRF). In fluorescent retrograde double labeling of thymus and recurrent laryngeal nerve both single and double labeled cells were found. The cells labeled by the injections into the thymus were colocalized with the neurons labeled by the tracer deposited in the recurrent laryngeal nerve to the NRA, NA, and NRF. Moreover along the rostrocaudal extent of the NRF and NA double labeled cells were present, showing that some of the thymic efferents are collaterals of the recurrent nerve fibers. Our experiments shown that some thymic vagal fibres originate from neurons of nucleus dorsalis nervi vagi (NDV) as demonstrated both by HRP and FB injected thymuses. The possible role of these efferents in thymic function is briefly discussed.
Brain Research | 1991
R. Bortolami; Laura Calzà; Maria Luisa Lucchi; L. Giardino; E. Callegari; E. Manni; Vito Enrico Pettorossi; A. M. Barazzoni; G. Lalatta Costerbosa
The peripheral territories of sheep trigeminal neurons which send their central process to the brainstem through the oculomotor nerve were investigated by the use of fluorescent tracers in double-labeling experiments. For this purpose Diamidino yellow (DY) injection into the oculomotor nerve was combined with Fast blue (FB) injection either into the extraocular muscles (EOMs), or the cornea, or the superior eyelid. Double-labeled DY + FB cells were found in the ophthalmic region of the trigeminal ganglion in addition to single-labeled DY or FB cells. The DY and DY + FB-labeled trigeminal cells were analysed immunocytochemically for their content of substance P (SP)-, calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-, and cholecystokinin-8 (CCK-8)-like. All single-labeled DY cells showed SP-, CGRP- or CCK-8-like immunoreactivity. Double-labeled DY + FB neurons innervating the EOMs were immunoreactive for each of the three peptides, whereas double-labeled neurons supplying the cornea were only CGRP-like positive. The findings suggest that, in the sheep, trigeminal neurons which send their process centrally through the oculomotor nerve supply the EOMs, the cornea, and the superior eyelid and contain neuropeptides which are usually associated with pain sensation.
Brain Research | 1972
R. Bortolami; E. Callegari; Maria Luisa Lucchi
Abstract A number of multipolar mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus cells react to cerebelectomy or decortication of the proprioceptive muscle afferent projection area or interruption of the posterior cerebellar peduncle. The cell reaction consists of a great increase in neurofilaments within the perikaryon. The reaction following decortication and interruption of the posterior cerebellar peduncle leads to the conclusion that processes of some multipolar mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus cells reach the cerebellar cortex directly via posterior cerebellar peduncles.
Brain Research | 2003
Roberto Chiocchetti; Paolo Clavenzani; A. M. Barazzoni; Annamaria Grandis; Cristiano Bombardi; Giovanna Lalatta Costerbosa; G. Petrosino; Giulia Bompadre Avoni; R. Bortolami
The distribution in the brainstem and cervical spinal cord of neurons supplying the reticulum and the reticular groove, the rumen, the omasum, the abomasum, and the small and large intestine was investigated in the sheep using the fluorescent retrograde tracer technique. Only the reticulum and reticular groove were represented in the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus nerve (DMNX), in the nucleus ambiguus (NA), and in the nucleus retroambigualis (NRA). The other forestomach, the abomasum and the small intestine were supplied by the DMNX only, with the exception of the rumen which was also innervated by the NRA. Some reticular formation neurons were found labeled after the injection of the tracer into the reticulum, the reticular groove, and the rumen. We present evidence that the reticular groove is the part of the forestomach having the widest representation, and also the richest innervation.
Experimental Neurology | 1976
E. Manni; R. Bortolami; V.E. Pettorossi; E. Callegari
Abstract In lambs, chronic section of the oculomotor nerve at the base of the skull just proximally to the cavernous sinus induced degeneration of some fibers in the central stump, although the peripheral stump contained some normal fibers. On the other hand, chronic section of the ophthalmic branch just distally to the semilunar ganglion was followed by degeneration of a certain number of medium and large caliber fibers in the ipsilateral oculomotor nerve. The presence of trigeminal afferent fibers in the trunk of an oculomotor nerve is supported by electrophysiologic experiments. Single-shock electrical stimulation of the frontal and nasociliary nerves and of the conjunctiva of the superior and inferior eyelids elicited short-latency evoked potentials, not only in the semilunar ganglion but also in the ipsilateral oculomotor nerve at the base of the skull. Such responses did not appear in those animals in which the ipsilateral ophthalmic and maxillary branches of the trigeminal nerve had been chronically cut. Thus, we can affirm that afferent trigeminal impulses enter the brain stem also through the third nerve. The perikarya of such a pathway are localized in the semilunar ganglion; the peripheral processes attain the conjunctiva of the superior and inferior eyelids through the ophthalmic and maxillary branches, and the central processes enter the oculomotor nerve by anastomoses between IIIrd and Vth cranial nerves after a short passage in the two trigeminal branches. The trigeminal nature of these fibers is also shown by the fact that electrical stimulation of the central stump of the IIIrd nerve can influence the dorsal neck muscles in the same way as other trigeminal afferents.
Anatomical Record-advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology | 2000
Paolo Berardinelli; Pier Augusto Scapolo; A. M. Barazzoni; Valentina Russo; R. Bortolami
In the present investigation, the fiber content and the diameter spectra of the intracranial portion of the three oculomotor nerves (oculomotor, trochlear, and abducens nerves) were analysed in sheep by light and electron microscopy. It was determined that up to 14.98% of fibers in the oculomotor nerve, 17.01% in the trochlear nerve, and 11.87% in the abducens nerve were unmyelinated. The myelinated fibers showed a bimodal distribution in their size spectrum in all three nerves, with a majority of large myelinated axons, but a considerable proportion of small myelinated fibers, as well. The sensory function of the unmyelinated fibers present in the three oculomotor nerves is discussed also on the basis of our previous morphofunctional investigations. Anat Rec 260:294–298, 2000.
Acta Oto-laryngologica | 1997
Vito Enrico Pettorossi; Ermanno Manni; Pierangelo Errico; Aldo Ferraresi; R. Bortolami
The cervico-ocular reflex (COR) was studied alone or in combination with the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) in the rabbit. Step stimulations of the body with respect to the fixed head induced small slow compensatory responses followed by large compensatory quick phases (QP). These responses remained aligned with the horizon at different head pitch angles. The QP reorientation in space was due to the gravity influence on the otolithic receptors. The vestibular induced QPs exhibit a similar pattern. Because of this reorientation, the reduction of the amplitude of the vestibular induced QPs, due to the addition of the COR, was maintained even at different static head positions. The electrolytic lesion of the ophthalmic branch of the trigeminal nerve deeply affected the space orientation of the COR. In particular, the cervically induced compensatory QPs of the eye ipsilateral to the lesion showed a remarkable variability of their trajectories and they lost space reorientation. These findings suggest that the coordinate system controlling the QPs is influenced by signals originating from both head position in space and eye position in the orbit.