Small and large cutaneous fibers display different excitability properties to slowly increasing ramp pulses
Jenny Tigerholm, Tatiana Nielson Hoberg, Dorthe Brønnum, Mette Vittinghus, Ken Steffen Frahm, Carsten Dahl Mørch
Abstract
When large nerve fibers are stimulated by long, slowly increasing electrical pulses, interactive mechanisms counteract the stimulation, which is called accommodation. The perception threshold tracking technique was able to assess accommodation in both small and large fibers. The novelty of this study is that large fibers displayed accommodation, whereas small fibers did not. Additionally, the difference in accommodation between the fiber could be linked to expression of voltage-gated ion channels by means of computational modeling.
Topics & Concepts
NeurosciencePsychologyPhysicsMechanical and Optical ResonatorsOrbital Angular Momentum in OpticsAdvanced Fiber Laser Technologies