10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «ELECTROTONUS»
Discover the use of
electrotonus in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
electrotonus and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Axon: Structure, Function, and Pathophysiology
The best supporting evidence for Hill's theory came from Solandt (1936), but he
soaked his frog nerves in up to 16 mM KC1 before use to reduce "changes in
excitability due to electrotonus." This was unfortunate, because accommodation ...
Stephen G. Waxman, Jeffery D. Kocsis, Peter K. Stys, 1995
2
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London: ...
Electrotonus is a physical phenomenon inasmuch as it occurs on any polarisable
core model, and, in such case, it is not affected by anaesthetics. But it is also a
physiological phenomenon, inasmuch as the chemical instability, viz., ...
3
Electrodiagnosis in Diseases of Nerve and Muscle: Principles ...
Subthreshold electrotonus probably does not involve Kf2 currents related to F
channels, which respond to a greater depolarization compared to I channels.
Subthreshold hyperpolarization activates inward rectification, gIR. The channel ...
4
Intermediate Physics for Medicine and Biology
This is called electrotonus or passive spread. In its quiescent state, the voltage all
along the inside of the axon has the constant resting value vr . Both ∂v/∂t and ∂
2v/∂x2 are zero. Equation 6.52 can be satisfied only if jm = 0. Although jm is ...
Russell K. Hobbie, Bradley J. Roth, 2007
5
Text-book of Human Physiology, Including Histology and ...
Testing Electrotonus in Inhibitory Nerves. — In order to ascertain the action of the
cardioinhibitory vagus libers in electrotonus Landois proceeded as follows: If
dyspnea be excited in rabbits, the number of heart-beats diminishes because the
...
Leonard Landois, Albert Philson Brubaker, Augustus Adolph Eshner, 1905
6
Peripheral Nerve Disorders: Handbook of Clinical Neurology ...
TE Threshold Electrotonus Fig. 4.3. Left panel: the current utilized to produce the
threshold electrotonus waveform, with colored bars reflecting the corresponding
points on the threshold electrotonus curve. Middle panel: threshold electrotonus ...
Gérard Said, Christian Krarup, 2013
7
The Human Brain and Spinal Cord: A Historical Study ...
The first, in which the author defined certain terms such as electrotonus, which is
today used to describe the longitudinal spread of current in the nerve or the state
of polarization, has been taken from the third edition (Berlin, 1870). EXCERPI ...
Edwin Clarke, Charles Donald O'Malley, 1996
8
Peripheral Nerve Diseases
Threshold electrotonus Changes in potential of the nodal membrane spread into
the internode, but slowly because of the resistance of the myelin sheath and
consequently the slow charging of the internodal capacitance. This results in
slow ...
9
From Molecules to Networks: An Introduction to Cellular and ...
(B) Abstraction of an equivalent electrical circuit based on the membrane
capacitance (cm), membrane resistance (rm), resting membrane potential (Er),
and internal resistance (r;). (C) Abstraction of the circuit for steady-state
electrotonus, ...
Ruth Heidelberger, M. Neal Waxham, John H. Byrne, 2009
10
Physiology and Biochemistry: Physiology and Biochemistry
The spread that occurs as though the fiber is passive (that is, the fiber does not
alter in such a way as to generate an action potential) is called electrotonus. In
contrast, the propagated wave of altered electrical potential difference in
response ...