Affiliation:
1. I. Physiologisches Institut, Universitat Heidelberg, Germany.
Abstract
The amygdala is critical for behavioral arousal and must therefore integrate a wide variety of inputs. We examined sensory inputs and the degree of convergence to single neurons in the amygdala in conscious freely moving cats. A pressor stimulus elicited responses, predominantly inhibitory, in one-half of the amygdalar neurons tested. Most neurons in the central and basal nuclei responded to carotid chemoreceptor activation typically with an excitation. Almost one-half of all amygdalar neurons tested, particularly in the central nucleus, received orthodromic input from the locus ceruleus, the substantia nigra, and/or the contralateral central nucleus of the amygdala. Exteroceptive sensory stimulation with optic, acoustic, tactile, and olfactory stimuli elicited responses in 33, 55, 39, and 59% of amygdalar neurons, respectively. Two-thirds of the neurons tested with more than one external stimulus modality responded in the same manner to the various stimuli (usually excitation), demonstrating a convergence of exteroceptive stimuli on single amygdalar neurons, particularly in the basal nucleus. Spontaneous and induced behavioral arousal elicited responses in 92 and 86% of neurons, respectively. Most neurons responded to multimodal exteroceptive stimuli and behavioral arousal in the same manner. We suggest that amygdalar inputs are highly varied and, in many cases, relatively nonspecific and that the amygdala integrates a large number of external and internal sensory modalities to regulate autonomic and behavioral responsiveness to various stimuli.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
15 articles.
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