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Effects of salicylate on neural activity in cat primary auditory cortex
Authors:K Ochi  JJ Eggermont
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Abstract:The effect of systemically applied salicylate on single-unit firing activity in primary auditory cortex was investigated in six cats. A dose of 200 mg/kg sodium salicylate was administered intraperitoneally, and recordings from the same units were performed prior to application and continuously up to, on average. 6 h after administration. Local field potentials were used to track the threshold shifts and general input-output (I/O) behavior following salicylate administration. All animals showed 20-30 dB of threshold shift about 2 h after administration and showed no recovery during the following 4 h. I/O curves were invariably of the recruitment type. Significant changes were found in spontaneous firing rates for two groups of unit separately. Low-spontaneous rate units (initial firing rate < 1 spike/s) showed an increase in spontaneous rate and high-spontaneous rate units (initial firing rate > 1 spike/s) showed a decrease in spontaneous firing rate. There were no significant changes in modal and mean values for interspike-interval (ISI) histograms. The duration-to-rebound peak in the autocorrelation function for spontaneous firings was prolonged significantly after salicylate administration. Peak cross-correlation coefficients for the firing patterns of simultaneously recorded cells showed no significant change but the correlogram's central peak was significantly narrower after salicylate application. The percentage of firings occurring in bursts showed no significant change after administration of salicylate. The best modulation frequency in response to stimulation with periodic click trains decreased after administration. Both the changes in the spontaneous autocorrelogram and in the temporal modulation transfer function suggest a prolongation in the duration of the Ca(2+)-activated K+ conductance of the cortical pyramidal cells following salicylate. This suggests that salicylates affect both the auditory periphery and the auditory cortex.
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