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1.
1. Conduction of impulses in peripheral myelinated fibers of a nerve trunk is a continuous process, since with uninjured nerve fibers: (a) within each internodal segment the conduction time increases continuously and linearly with increasing conduction distance; (b) the presence of nodes of Ranvier does not result in any detectable discontinuity in the conduction of the impulse; (c) the ascending phase of the spike always has an S shape and never presents signs of fractionation; (d) the shape and magnitude of the spike are constant at all points of each internodal segment. 2. Records have been presented of the external logitudinal current that flows during propagation of an impulse in undissected single nerve fiber (Fig. 6). 3. Propagation of impulses across a conduction block occurs with a readily demonstrable discontinuity.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The characteristics of fibers of a cutaneous nerve supplying the wing skin of the pigeon have been investigated with electrophysiological and electron microscopic techniques.Recordings of the compound action potential showed four distinct peaks with conduction velocities of about 30 m/s, 12 m/s, 4 m/s and 0.5 m/s.From electron micrographs both fiber diameters and thickness of myelin sheath were assessed and used as criteria for segregating various fiber populations. Altogether four groups could be discerned: large thickly myelinated fibers, small thickly myelinated fibers, small thinly myelinated fibers, and unmyelinated or C-fibers. The subdivision of the thickly myelinated fibers into two populations is evidenced mainly by corresponding peaks in the compound action potential. The thinly myelinated fibers with a mean diameter of 2 m contributed about 90% of all myelinated fibers in this nerve.When comparing fiber dimensions and conduction velocities of this avian nerve with those of mammalian cutaneous nerves, the lower CV's of avian nerve fibers can be explained by smaller diameters and thinner myelin sheaths.The results of this investigation are a prerequisite for latency considerations in central somatosensory pathways in birds.Abbreviations CAP compound action potential - CV conduction velocity - D fiber diameter - d axon diameter - g ratio d/D - m thickness of myelin sheath  相似文献   

3.
Peters  Alan 《Brain Cell Biology》2002,31(8-9):581-593
It was believed that the cause of the cognitive decline exhibited by human and non-human primates during normal aging was a loss of cortical neurons. It is now known that significant numbers of cortical neurons are not lost and other bases for the cognitive decline have been sought. One contributing factor may be changes in nerve fibers. With age some myelin sheaths exhibit degenerative changes, such as the formation of splits containing electron dense cytoplasm, and the formation on myelin balloons. It is suggested that such degenerative changes lead to cognitive decline because they cause changes in conduction velocity, resulting in a disruption of the normal timing in neuronal circuits. Yet as degeneration occurs, other changes, such as the formation of redundant myelin and increasing thickness suggest of sheaths, suggest some myelin formation is continuing during aging. Another indication of this is that oligodendrocytes increase in number withage. In addition to the myelin changes, stereological studies have shown a loss of nerve fibers from the white matter of the cerebral hemispheres of humans, while other studies have shown a loss of nerve fibers from the optic nerves and anterior commissure in monkeys. It is likely that such nerve fiber loss also contributes to cognitive decline, because of the consequent decrease in connections between neurons. Degeneration of myelin itself does not seem to result in microglial cells undertaking phagocytosis. These cells are probably only activated when large numbers of nerve fibers are lost, as can occur in the optic nerve.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of gap junctional coupling, sodium ion channel distribution, and extracellular conductivity on transverse conduction in cardiac tissue is explored using a microdomain model that incorporates aspects of the inhomogeneous cellular structure. The propagation velocities found in our model are compared to those in the classic bidomain model and indicate a strong ephaptic microdomain contribution to conduction depending on the parameter regime. We show that ephaptic effects can be quite significant in the junctional spaces between cells, and that the cell activation sequence is modified substantially by these effects. Further, we find that transverse propagation can be maintained by ephaptic effects, even in the absence of gap junctional coupling. The mechanism by which this occurs is found to be cablelike in that the junctional regions act like inverted cables. Our results provide insight into several recent experimental studies that indirectly indicate a mode of action potential propagation that does not rely exclusively on gap junctions.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of gap junctional coupling, sodium ion channel distribution, and extracellular conductivity on transverse conduction in cardiac tissue is explored using a microdomain model that incorporates aspects of the inhomogeneous cellular structure. The propagation velocities found in our model are compared to those in the classic bidomain model and indicate a strong ephaptic microdomain contribution to conduction depending on the parameter regime. We show that ephaptic effects can be quite significant in the junctional spaces between cells, and that the cell activation sequence is modified substantially by these effects. Further, we find that transverse propagation can be maintained by ephaptic effects, even in the absence of gap junctional coupling. The mechanism by which this occurs is found to be cablelike in that the junctional regions act like inverted cables. Our results provide insight into several recent experimental studies that indirectly indicate a mode of action potential propagation that does not rely exclusively on gap junctions.  相似文献   

6.
The propagation of a transverse disturbance along a tubular membrane enclosing a fluid medium and embedded in another is considered. It is shown that the velocity of propagation of such a disturbance can be identified with the velocity of the conduction process of thin-sheathed nerve fibers. The required values of the associated parameters, tension and pressure, appear not unreasonable. The results obtained indicate that experimental observations on the relation between the conduction velocity and the fiber diameter, as well as the effects of longitudinal stretching and transverse squeezing on the velocity of the conduction process in nerve, may be correlated on such a basis.  相似文献   

7.
The pathophysiology of multiple sclerosis is reviewed, with emphasis on the axonal conduction properties underlying the production of symptoms, and the course of the disease. The major cause of the negative symptoms during relapses (e.g. paralysis, blindness and numbness) is conduction block, caused largely by demyelination and inflammation, and possibly by defects in synaptic transmission and putative circulating blocking factors. Recovery from symptoms during remissions is due mainly to the restoration of axonal function, either by remyelination, the resolution of inflammation, or the restoration of conduction to axons which persist in the demyelinated state. Conduction in the latter axons shows a number of deficits, particularly with regard to the conduction of trains of impulses and these contribute to weakness and sensory problems. The mechanisms underlying the sensitivity of symptoms to changes in body temperature (Uhthoff's phenomenon) are discussed. The origin of 'positive' symptoms, such as tingling sensations, are described, including the generation of ectopic trains and bursts of impulses, ephaptic interactions between axons and/or neurons, the triggering of additional, spurious impulses by the transmission of normal impulses, the mechanosensitivity of axons underlying movement-induced sensations (e.g. Lhermitte's phenomenon) and pain. The clinical course of the disease is discussed, together with its relationship to the evolution of lesions as revealed by magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy. The earliest detectable event in the development of most new lesions is a breakdown of the blood-brain barrier in association with inflammation. Inflammation resolves after approximately one month, at which time there is an improvement in the symptoms. Demyelination occurs during the inflammatory phase of the lesion. An important mechanism determining persistent neurological deficit is axonal degeneration, although persistent conduction block arising from the failure of repair mechanisms probably also contributes.  相似文献   

8.
Schwann cells in the peripheral nervous systems extend their membranes to wrap axons concentrically and form the insulating sheath, called myelin. The spaces between layers of myelin are sealed by myelin junctions. This tight insulation enables rapid conduction of electric impulses (action potentials) through axons. Demyelination (stripping off the insulating sheath) has been widely regarded as one of the most important mechanisms altering the action potential propagation in many neurological diseases. However, the effective nerve conduction is also thought to require a proper myelin seal through myelin junctions such as tight junctions and adherens junctions. In the present study, we have demonstrated the disruption of myelin junctions in a mouse model (Pmp22+/-) of hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP) with heterozygous deletion of Pmp22 gene. We observed a robust increase of F-actin in Pmp22+/- nerve regions where myelin junctions were disrupted, leading to increased myelin permeability. These abnormalities were present long before segmental demyelination at the late phase of Pmp22+/- mice. Moreover, the increase of F-actin levels correlated with an enhanced activity of p21-activated kinase (PAK1), a molecule known to regulate actin polymerization. Pharmacological inhibition of PAK normalized levels of F-actin, and completely prevented the progression of the myelin junction disruption and nerve conduction failure in Pmp22+/- mice. Our findings explain how abnormal myelin permeability is caused in HNPP, leading to impaired action potential propagation in the absence of demyelination. We call it “functional demyelination”, a novel mechanism upstream to the actual stripping of myelin that is relevant to many demyelinating diseases. This observation also provides a potential therapeutic approach for HNPP.  相似文献   

9.
In anesthetized in vivo preparations, responses of two types of extraocular muscle fibers have been studied. The small, multiply innervated slow fibers have been shown to be capable of producing propagated impulses, and thus have been labeled slow multi-innervated twitch fibers. Fast and slow multi-innervated twitch fibers are distinguished by impulse conduction velocities, by ranges of membrane potentials, by amplitudes and frequencies of the miniature end plate potentials, by responses to the intravenous administration of succinylcholine, by the frequency of stimulation required for fused tetanus, and by the velocities of conduction of the nerve fibers innervating each of the muscle fiber types.  相似文献   

10.
Membrane properties such as potentials (intracellular, extracellular, electrotonic) and axonal excitability indices (strength–duration and charge–duration curves, strength–duration time constants, rheobasic currents, recovery cycles) can now be measured in healthy subjects and patients with demyelinating neuropathies. They are regarded here in two cases of simultaneously reduced paranodal seal resistance and myelin lamellae in one to three consecutive internodes of human motor nerve fiber. The investigations are performed for 70 and 96% myelin reduction values. The first value is not sufficient to develop a conduction block, but the second leads to a block and the corresponding demyelinations are regarded as mild and severe. For both the mild and severe demyelinations, the paranodally internodally focally demyelinated cases (termed as PIFD1, PIFD2, and PIFD3, respectively, with one, two, and three demyelinated internodes) are simulated using our previous double-cable model of the fiber. The axon model consists of 30 nodes and 29 internodes. The membrane property abnormalities obtained can be observed in vivo in patients with demyelinating forms of Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) and multifocal motor neuropathy (MMN). The study confirms that focal demyelinations are specific indicators for acquired demyelinating neuropathies. Moreover, the following changes have been calculated in our previous papers: (1) uniform reduction of myelin thickness in all internodes (Stephanova et al. in Clin Neurophysiol 116: 1153–1158, 2005); (2) demyelination of all paranodal regions (Stephanova and Daskalova in Clin Neurophysiol 116: 1159–1166, 2005a); (3) simultaneous reduction of myelin thickness and paranodal demyelination in all internodes (Stephanova and Daskalova in Clin Neurophysiol 116: 2334–2341, 2005b); and (4) reduction of myelin thickness of up to three internodes (Stephanova et al., in J Biol Phys, 2006a,b, DOI: 10.1007/s10867-005-9001-9; DOI: 10.1007/s10867-006-9008-x). The mem- brane property abnormalities obtained in the homogenously demyelinated cases are quite different and abnormally greater than those in the case investigated here of simultaneous reduction in myelin thickness and paranodal demyelination of up to three internodes. Our previous and present results show that unless focal demyelination is severe enough to cause outright conduction block, changes are so slight as to be essentially indistinguishable from normal values. Consequently, the excitability-based approaches that have shown strong potential as diagnostic tools in systematically demyelinated conditions may not be useful in detecting mild focal demyelinations, independently of whether they are internodal, paranodal, or paranodal internodal.  相似文献   

11.
Slowly adapting lung stretch receptors (SARs) and their vagal afferents are considered to play an important role in the mediation of numerous respiratory reflexes. The understanding of such reflexes has been facilitated by altering the discharge properties of SARs or by preventing the conduction of SAR-generated impulses to the brain stem. In a number of naturally occurring diseases of the peripheral nervous system, the vagus nerve and vagal reflexes are damaged. We have studied the function of SARs in anesthetized dogs with acrylamide neuropathy, a distal axonopathy that has been used as a model of naturally occurring neuropathies. There was a marked increase in threshold and decrease in firing rate of SARs in dogs with moderate neuropathy. Abnormal SAR discharge patterns were observed, and there was a depletion of those units innervated by the fastest conducting vagal afferent fibers in treated animals. Acrylamide induced degeneration of myelinated fibers in bronchial branches of the vagus nerve. These abnormalities were partially reversed upon withdrawal of the neurotoxin. Acrylamide may be a useful agent in the study of vagally mediated respiratory reflexes. SAR function is likely to be abnormal in diseases of the peripheral nervous system.  相似文献   

12.
The coordination of the vertebrate nervous system requires high velocity signal transmission between different brain areas. High speed nerve conduction is achieved in the myelinated fibers of both the central and the peripheral nervous system where the myelin sheath acts as an insulator of the axon. The interactions between the glial cell and the adjacent axon, namely axo-glial interactions, segregate the fiber in distinct molecular and functional domains that ensure the rapid propagation of action potentials. These domains are the node of Ranvier, the paranode, the juxtaparanode and the internode and are characterized by multiprotein complexes between voltage-gated ion channels, cell adhesion molecules, members of the Neurexin family and cytoskeletal proteins. In the present review, we outline recent evidence on the key players of axo-glial interactions, depicting their importance in myelinated fiber physiology and disease.  相似文献   

13.
The Hodgkin-Huxley model of the nerve axon describes excitation and propagation of the nerve impulse by means of a nonlinear partial differential equation. This equation relates the conservation of the electric current along the cablelike structure of the axon to the active processes represented by a system of three rate equations for the transport of ions through the nerve membrane. These equations have been integrated numerically with respect to both distance and time for boundary conditions corresponding to a finite length of squid axon stimulated intracellularly at its midpoint. Computations were made for the threshold strength-duration curve and for the repetitive firing of propagated impulses in response to a maintained stimulus. These results are compared with previous solutions for the space-clamped axon. The effect of temperature on the threshold intensity for a short stimulus and for rheobase was determined for a series of values of temperature. Other computations show that a highly unstable subthreshold propagating wave is initiated in principle by a just threshold stimulus; that the stability of the subthreshold wave can be enhanced by reducing the excitability of the axon as with an anesthetic agent, perhaps to the point where it might be observed experimentally; but that with a somewhat greater degree of narcotization, the axon gives only decrementally propagated impulses.  相似文献   

14.
Myelinated axon nerve impulses travel 100 times more rapidly than impulses in non‐myelinated axons. Increased speed is currently believed to be due to ‘hopping’ or ‘saltatory propagation’ along the axon, but the mechanism by which impulses flow has never been adequately explained. We have used modeling approaches to simulate a role for proton hopping in the space between the plasma membrane and myelin sheath as the mechanism of nerve action‐potential flow.  相似文献   

15.
Giant nerve fibers of the shrimp family Penaeidae conduct impulses at the velocity highest among all animal species (∼210 m/s; highest in mammals = 120 m/s). We examined these giant and other small nerve fibers morphologically using a differential interference contrast microscope as well as an electron microscope, and found a very specialized form of excitable membrane that functions as a node for saltatory conduction of the impulse. This node appeared under the light microscope as a characteristic pattern of concentrically aligned rings in a very small spot of the myelin sheath. The diameter of the innermost ring of the node was about 5 μm, and the distance between these nodes was as long as 12 mm. Via an electron microscope, these nodes were characterized by a complete lack of the myelin sheath, forming a fenestration that has a tight junction with an axonal membrane. Voltage clamp measurements by a sucrose gap technique demonstrated that the axonal membrane at these fenestration nodes is exclusively excitable and that the large submyelinic space is a unique conductive pathway for loop currents for saltatory conduction through such fenestration nodes. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of action potential conduction in myelinated axons on the state of phosphorylation of myelin basic protein was studied in rat optic nerve incubated in vitro. For this purpose we used a technique that permits continuous recording of the responses of nerves to electrical stimulation together with the "back-phosphorylation" assay. Our results indicate that action potential conduction, but not electrical stimulation, increased the state of phosphorylation of myelin basic protein. The increment in basic protein phosphorylation was related to the number of impulses conducted, up to a maximal change which occurred after 12 X 10(3) impulses. Also, the effect of action potential conduction was reversible, since the state of myelin basic protein phosphorylation returned to control levels within 5 min of stopping stimulation. These findings raise the interesting possibility that myelin basic protein phosphorylation plays a role in some dynamic function of myelin, perhaps related to ion transport or to the process of recovery of ionic gradients.  相似文献   

17.
The cable model of a passive, myelinated fiber is derived using the theory of electromagnetic propagation in periodic structures. The cable may be excited by an intracellular source or by an arbitrary, time-varying, applied extracellular field. When the cable is stimulated by a distant source, its properties are qualitatively similar to an unmyelinated fiber. Under these conditions relative threshold is proportional to the cube of the source distance and inversely proportional to the square of the fiber diameter. Electrical parameters of the model are chosen where possible, from mammalian peripheral nerve and anatomic parameters from cat auditory nerve. Several anatomic representations of the paranodal region are analyzed for their effects on the length and time constants of the fibers. Sensitivity of the model to parameter changes is studied. The linear model reliably predicts the effects of fiber size and electrode-fiber separation on threshold of cat dorsal column fibers to extracellular electrical stimulation.  相似文献   

18.
It was shown by means of a mathematical model of a myelinated nerve fiber (Frankenhaeuser — Huxley) that an increase in threshold and decrease in the amplitude of the action potential (AP) during the relative refractory period are due mainly to sodium inactivation. The contribution of increased potassium permeability to these changes is small, for the chief component of the outgoing ionic current in the node of Ranvier is not the potassium current, but the leak current. Given the ratio between these currents the increase in threshold and graduation of the action potential in the node membrane are less marked than in the membrane of the squid giant axon. At the beginning of the relative refractory period the AP evoked by strong stimulation is conducted only to the next node. Later in the refractory period impulses are conducted incrementally, and the threshold for the spreading impulse is higher than the threshold for spike excitation in the stimulated node. Delay in impulse conduction between refractory nodes leads to the formation of a retrograde depolarization wave. The reasons for differences in the mechanisms of impulse conduction along unmyelinated and myelinated refractory fibers are discussed.Vishnevskii Institute of Surgery, Academy of Medical Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 4, No. 2, pp. 201–207, March–April, 1972.  相似文献   

19.
Twenty-eight anaesthetized open-chest mongrel dogs were used. Programmed atrial pacing was used and Hisian electrograms recorded through endocavitary electro-catheters to study and quantify the concealed conduction of non-transmitted atrial impulses in the A-V node. An exponential model was used in three situations to quantify the nodal conduction during incremental atrial pacing: a) during 1:1 conduction, b) during 2:1 nodal block, and c) during pacing, coupling an atrial impulse delivered at fixed intervals and blocked in the A-V node to each transmitted impulse. The relation between intranodal conduction times was analyzed both with and without the presence of blocked impulses, and the quotient between the obtained functions in situations b, c and situation a was determined. In a subgroup of 13 dogs the study was repeated following pharmacological block of the autonomic nervous system. In dogs with autonomic block, this relation always tended to decrease when the atrial pacing rate increased. The variations in the group of dogs with intact autonomic nervous systems were not homogeneous. During pacing with coupled block impulses, the progressive removal of conduction curves obtained for each coupling interval with respect to those obtained during 1:1 transmission, expresses the interval with respect ot those obtained during 1:1 transmission, expresses the lesser influence of the blocked impulses on decreasing their coupling interval.  相似文献   

20.
Axonal demyelination leads to an increase in the refractory period for propagation of the action potential. Computer simulations were used to investigate the mechanism by which changes in the passive properties of the internodal membrane increase the refractory period. The properties of the voltage dependent ion channels can be altered to restore conduction in demyeliated nerve fibers. The ability of these alterations to decrease the refractory period of demyelinated model nerve fibers was compared. The model nerve fiber contained six nodes. The action potential was stimulated at node one and propagated to node six. The internode between nodes three and four was demyelinated in a graded manner. The absolute refractory period for propagation of the action potential through the demyelinated internode increased as the number of myelin wraps was reduced to less than 25% of the normal value. The increase in refractory period was found to be due to a reduction in the rate or repolarization of the action potential at node three. The delay in repolarization reduced the rate of recovery of inactivated Na channels and slowed the closing of K channels. The rate of repolarization of node three was reduced by the conduction delay for the depolarization of node four caused by demyelination of the preceeding internode. In these simulations the increase in refractory period due to demyelination was eliminated by slowing the onset of Na channel inactivation. A small reduction of the K conductance also decreased the refractory period. However, larger reductions eliminated this effect.  相似文献   

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