DocumentCode
1214735
Title
Sensory Effects of Transient Electrical Stimulation - Evaluation with a Neuroelectric Model
Author
Reilly, J.Patrick ; Freeman, Vanda T. ; Larkin, Willard D.
Author_Institution
Applied Physics Laboratory, Johns Hopkins University
Issue
12
fYear
1985
Firstpage
1001
Lastpage
1011
Abstract
A model of myelinated nerve axon was used to study the initiation and propagation of action potentials for a variety of extracellular electrical stimuli. Frankenhaeuser-Huxley nonlinearities were incorporated at each of several nodes in a longitudinal array, and the extracellular current pulse was modeled as a spatial distribution of voltage disturbance along the membrane. Results from the model were compared to data from human sensory experiments and from animal electrophysiological experiments. Effects of polarity, electrode position, pulse duration, and biphasic oscillation frequency were examined. Biphasic pulses have higher excitation thresholds than monophasic pulses, provided the duration of a single phase is short relative to the time constant of the membrane depolarization process. The shapes of strength/duration curves from sensory experiments conform well to model predictions for monophasic stimuli. Strength/frequency curves derived from the model are similar to those from sensory stimulation with sinusoidal currents. The shapes of strength/frequency curves can be explained by membrane integration effects at high frequencies and membrane leakage effects at low frequencies. The model predicts lower thresholds for cathodal than for anodal stimulation: the predicted degree of polarity selectivity is confirmed by direct stimulation of axons in animal experiments, but is at variance with the selectivity found in human transcutaneous stimulation.
Keywords
Animals; Biomembranes; Electrical stimulation; Extracellular; Frequency; Humans; Nerve fibers; Predictive models; Shape; Voltage; Action Potentials; Animals; Axons; Electric Stimulation; Models, Neurological; Nerve Fibers, Myelinated;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.1985.325509
Filename
4121989
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