AUTHOR=Macefield Vaughan G. TITLE=On the Number of Preganglionic Neurons Driving Human Postganglionic Sympathetic Neurons: A Comparison of Modeling and Empirical Data JOURNAL=Frontiers in Neuroscience VOLUME=volume 5 - 2011 YEAR=2011 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/neuroscience/articles/10.3389/fnins.2011.00132 DOI=10.3389/fnins.2011.00132 ISSN=1662-453X ABSTRACT=Postganglionic sympathetic axons in awake healthy human subjects, regardless of their identity as muscle vasoconstrictor, cutaneous vasoconstrictor or sudomotor neurones, discharge with a low firing probability (~30%), generate low firing rates (~0.5 Hz) and typically fire only once per cardiac interval. The purpose of the present study was to use modelling of spike trains in an attempt to define the number of preganglionic neurones that drive an individual postganglionic neurone. Artificial spike trains were generated in 1-3 preganglionic neurones converging onto a single postganglionic neurone. Each preganglionic input fired with a mean interval distribution of either 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500 or 3000 ms and the standard deviation varied between 0.5, 1.0 and 2.0 x the mean interval; the discharge frequency of each preganglionic neurone exhibited positive skewness and kurtosis. Of the 45 patterns examined, the mean discharge properties of the postganglionic neurone could only be explained by it being driven by, on average, two preganglionic neurones firing with a mean interspike interval of 2500 ms and SD of 5000 ms. The mean firing rate resulting from this pattern was 0.22 Hz, comparable to that of spontaneously active muscle vasoconstrictor neurones in healthy subjects (0.40 Hz). Likewise, the distribution of the number of spikes per cardiac interval was similar between the modelled and actual data: 0 spikes (69.5 vs 66.6 %), 1 spike (25.6 vs 21.2 %), 2 spikes (4.3 vs 6.4 %), 3 spikes (0.5 vs 1.7 %) and 4 spikes (0.1 vs 0.7 %). Although some features of the firing patterns could be explained by the postganglionic neurone being driven by a single preganglionic neurone, none of the emulated firing patterns generated by the firing of three preganglionic neurones matched the discharge of the real neurones. These modelling data indicate that, on average, human postganglionic sympathetic neurones are driven by two preganglionic inputs.