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J Physiol Volume 515, Number 3, 799-811, March 15, 1999
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The Journal of Physiology (1999), 515.3, pp. 799-811
© Copyright 1999 The Physiological Society

Activity-dependent slowing of conduction differentiates functional subtypes of C fibres innervating human skin

Jordi Serra, Mario Campero, José Ochoa and Hugh Bostock

Neuromuscular Unit, Good Samaritan Hospital & Medical Center, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, OR, USA


The effects of impulse activity on conduction in cutaneous C fibres have been examined in 46 microneurographic recordings from 11 normal subjects and 11 diabetic patients with normal nerve conduction. A tungsten microelectrode was inserted into a cutaneous nerve, usually the superficial peroneal close to the ankle, and intraneural microstimulation was used to identify an area of skin innervated. Three minute trains of 0·25 ms stimuli at 1, 2 and 4 Hz were then delivered to the surface of the skin, separated by intervals of 6 min with stimulation at 0·25 Hz. Slowing and block of conduction were measured from the nerve responses for up to seven C units per stimulation sequence.


Three types of C unit were distinguished by their responses to repetitive stimulation: type 1 units slowed progressively during the 3 min trains; slowing of type 2 units reached a plateau within 1 min; while type 3 units hardly slowed at all. Data from normal and diabetic subjects did not differ and were pooled. After 3 min at 2 Hz, the percentage increases in latency were for type 1, 28·3 ± 9·7 (n = 63 units, mean ± s.d.); for type 2, 5·2 ± 1·6 (n = 14); and for type 3, 0·8 ± 0·5 (n = 5), with no overlap. After 3 min at 4 Hz, 58 % of type 1 units (but no type 2 or 3 units) blocked intermittently. Recovery of latency after stimulation was faster for type 2 than for type 1 units, but conduction velocities of the three types were similar.


Type 1 units were identified as nociceptors and 7 type 2 units were identified as 'cold' fibres, activated by non-noxious cold, with no overlap in modality. None of the units tested was activated by weak mechanical stimuli or reflex sympathetic activation.


Spike waveforms were averaged for 18 type 1, 10 type 2 and 6 type 3 units. All units had predominantly triphasic action potentials with a major negative peak, but those of type 3 units were on average both smaller and briefer than those of type 1 and type 2 units.


It is concluded that repetitive electrical stimulation reliably differentiates nociceptive from cold-specific C fibres innervating human hairy skin, as has previously been shown for the rat. Cold fibres can propagate impulses continuously at much higher rates than nociceptive fibres. The nature of the type 3 units is unclear.


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