Presentation Speech by Professor G. Liljestrand, member of the Staff of Professors of the Royal Caroline Institute, on December 10, 1932
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
Within the domain of physiology and medicine probably few spheres
will be calculated to attract to themselves attention to the same
extent as the nervous system, that distributor of rapid messages
between the various parts of the body and, beyond that, the
material foundation of mental life. An oft-used picture likens
the nervous system to a telephone or telegraph system in the
body, where the nerves are the cables, while the brain and spinal
cord may be regarded as immense stations with numberless coupling
possibilities. To obtain a clearer insight into this complicated
machinery, its construction, and its own proper features, has
been associated with great difficulties. Comprehensive
investigations, especially by the two scientists Golgi and Cajal - both of them in their
time rewarded by the Nobel Prize - have shown, however, that it
is mainly built up of a very large number of characteristic
elements or units, which have been given the name
«neurones». Each of these consists of a cell, where
certain parts are transformed for their special tasks into long
processes or runners. Some of these - sometimes a metre or more
in length - form part of just the lines which are united in the
nerve cables, while others run within the spinal cord and the
brain. The afferent or sensory neurones take messages from the
surface of the body or internal organs to the stations, the
efferent or motor neurones convey orders from these to the
muscles and glands. In the stations special neurones can be
coupled in between these two kinds.
Of fundamental importance for our knowledge of the workings of
the nervous system was the discovery that an external influence,
a so-called stimulus, can, without the cooperation of the will,
call forth a definite response, such as the contraction of
certain muscles. A well-known example is presented by the
involuntary blinking at a loud and unexpected noise. The external
influence is, so to speak, thrown back or reflected, from which
the phenomenon received the name «reflex». For every
one of our movements, even under the influence of the will, for
numerous processes in the interior of the body, and in all
probability also for mental life itself in its various forms, the
reflexes play a highly important role. As a rule they are
provoked by cooperation between groups of afferent, internuncial,
and efferent neurones.
Sir Charles Sherrington has made
extraordinary contributions to our knowledge of the reflex
phenomena. In exact experiments employing quantitative methods he
has investigated numerous reflexes, and also single neurones,
with the object of establishing general laws for the origin and
cooperation of the reflexes in the organism.
While a muscle which has been at rest becomes quite relaxed
immediately after death, this is not the case with the living
organ in a healthy person, where the rest is only apparent. Thus,
even during sleep, but still more under the influence of a
considerable load, e.g. standing, the muscle exhibits a varying
degree of persistent but weak tension. This is due to reflexes
released, as Sherrington has shown, principally in such a way
that every stretching of the muscle affects special formations
situated in its interior - a sort of reception apparatus or sense
organ - from which signals are sent to the spinal cord, after
which a degree of tension suitable to the conditions is mobilized
in the muscle. From this the latter acquires a certain
plasticity, it gives the body and its constituent parts the
necessary stability and is ever ready.
When a reflex movement is provoked, a number of muscles usually
contract in varying degrees. But, furthermore, Sherrington has
found that this activity is as a rule accompanied by relaxation
or inhibition of muscles whose effect is in the opposite sense.
In bending, for example, the tension in the extensors is
decreased and vice versa. As, in addition, every separate muscle
receives a large number of nerve fibres, it is a complicated
problem which, even in that apparently simple case, has to be
dealt with in the station. Simultaneously, or in rapid
succession, thousands of messages are received and deciphered,
and the consequent coupling-in carried out in such a way that the
movement is precise and appropriate. In more compound movements,
such as walking or running, the various reflexes sometimes mesh
like the cogs in a precision instrument, an extraordinarily
complicated interplay thereby becoming necessary. To Sherrington
belongs principally the credit of having solved the problem of
how this is accomplished.
It has appeared from his investigations that a discharge from a
motor neurone to the muscular fibres occurs when a condition of
sufficient stimulus or tension is developed in the neurone, as a
result of the impulses which have flowed in from various
quarters. But here, as so often, different kinds of influences
can make themselves felt in conflicting senses, nay, even one and
the same external influence can result in conflicting effects on
different neurones or even, under varying conditions, on the same
neurone. In this connection what is of the greatest importance is
the condition of the station itself, such as the degree of
fatigue, or, in other cases, of specially increased
susceptibility. The neurone has the capacity of to a certain
extent gathering up and summing these different, simultaneous or
rapidly succeeding impulses; the inhibiting and stimulating
forces can then wholly or partly counterbalance each other, and
the result will be decided by which of them obtains the upper
hand for the time being. Both are equally necessary for the
normal course of the reflexes and they must cooperate intimately.
In many cases they obtain the mastery in turn, as in the case of
rhythmic reflexes.
I must content myself with this short indication of Sherrington's
considerable contributions. His discoveries have ushered in a new
epoch in the physiology of the nervous system. On the firm
foundation he has laid, many have already built further - among
them should be mentioned particularly Magnus's and de Kleyn's
brilliant work on the posture of the body, how it is assumed and
maintained. But Sherrington's work has already partly passed
through the ordeal of fire which lies in its application to
pathological conditions; it has shown itself to be of great
importance for the understanding of certain disturbances within
the nervous system, and, certainly, matters here are still in
their infancy.
While Sherrington has devoted his attention
particularly to the reflexes as a whole, and very specially
investigated how the coupling-in at the stations takes place
under the influence of various factors, his fellow-countryman,
Edgar Douglas Adrian, has attempted to illuminate the question of
the nature of the processes connected with the lines to and from
the stations and also within the receiving apparatuses, i.e. the
sense organs. He has availed himself of the fact which has been
well-known since the middle of last century, that activity in an
organ is usually accompanied by electric changes, in that a
region in action becomes negatively charged in relation to one
that is at rest.
This was proved as regards the sense organs by our
fellow-countryman Fritiof Holmgren in 1866. Such so-called
«action currents» appear also in the nerves, where they
flow with moderate speed; in the same way as one can listen to a
conversation from a telephone wire one ought to be able to obtain
a conception of the ingoing and outgoing messages or impulses by
diverting the action currents from the nerves. Certainly it is a
matter of excessively weak currents, but as the microscope once
opened for investigators new fields within the world of form,
modern technical progress has afforded unsuspected possibilities
for studying the functions. For his purpose Adrian used radio
amplifiers, by means of which he could increase the effects
thousands of times and yet get them reproduced accurately. When
he attempted in this way to divert the currents from a nerve
under natural conditions, e.g. the signals which are sent when a
muscle is stretched, he obtained irregular effects, difficult of
interpretation. The explanation of this had already been given:
the impulses in the different nerve fibres do not come
simultaneously, they can therefore nullify or amplify each other.
The situation may be compared with an attempt to construct the
separate conversations by listening to the different wires in a
telephone cable simultaneously. It was therefore necessary to try
to obtain impulses corresponding to one single conversation or
one sending station, and in this, by means of special artifices,
Adrian and his collaborators were successful for both afferent
and efferent neurones - thereby preparing the way for important
discoveries. Adrian and his school were able to show that if the
receiving apparatuses in the muscle were stimulated by means of
various powerful loads, the size of the impulses was nevertheless
unchanged. This was in agreement with the conclusion which had
already been arrived at - inter alia through Adrian's own work:
the single nerve fibre gives, as the expression is, all or none.
The light which falls on the retina of the eye, the slight
contact of the skin, or the factors which cause pain in a wound,
all exercise their influence, as Adrian has shown, by giving rise
to impulses of fundamentally the same kind in the nerve fibres by
the mediation of the special sense organs. Of them all, it is
also true that a more intensive external influence, such as a
stronger flood of light, or a more powerful pressure, calls forth
an ever more rapid stream of impulses up to a maximum value
determined by the character of the nerve; in addition the
stronger stimulus engages ever more single nerve fibres. But the
orders issued to the muscles and nerves are also of this
character. Thus the signals are the same everywhere, but the
receiving stations change and the results with them. The sending
stations, also, may be differently constituted; if the external
influence which gives rise to the impulses remains unchanged, the
rapidity of the impulses gradually diminishes, but the rate
varies for different cases. The sense organs have thus a varying
power of adapting themselves to their milieu and only respond to
changes in it. These circumstances afford important points of
contact as to the physiological tasks of the various sense organs
and the connection between external influences and our
sensations.
Adrian's investigations have given us a highly important insight
into the question of the nerve principle and the adaptability of
the sense organs. In reality they open new paths within important
fields which have only to a slight extent been accessible for
research hitherto.
As will appear from the above, Sherrington's and Adrian's discoveries concerning the function of the neurone deal mainly with different sides of the matter. Together, however, they provide a complete picture of the course of events, which implies a great step forward and gives research a new starting-point of the greatest importance in its perpetual struggle for clearer insight.
Sir Charles Sherrington and Professor
Adrian. Twenty-six years ago the Nobel Prize for Physiology or
Medicine was given to Golgi and Cajal who laid the foundation for
the modern conception of the structure of the nervous system. It
is with the function of that system that your work is
concerned.
You, Sir Charles, in famous researches, in part already classic,
in part still proceeding with outstanding success, have
contributed more than anybody else to our knowledge of what you
have termed the integrative action of the nervous system. Your
numerous discoveries in this field have profoundly influenced our
science and will certainly continue to do so in the future.
To you, Professor Adrian, is due the opening up of new lines of
research of great importance and promise for neurophysiology.
This has been amply demonstrated by your own discoveries
concerning the nature of the nervous impulses and the physical
basis of sensation.
The Caroline Institute has decided to award this year's Nobel
Prize for Physiology or Medicine to you jointly for your
discoveries regarding the function of the neurone.
On behalf of the Institute I offer you its hearty congratulations
on your proud achievements, so worthy of the great English school
of physiology. With these words I have the honour of asking you
to accept the prize from the hands of His Majesty the King.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1922-1941, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1965
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1932