Title :
Microwave effects on input resistance and action potential firing of snail neurons
Author :
Ginsburg, Kenneth Stacey ; Lin, James C. ; Neill, William D O
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Bioeng., Illinois Univ., Chicago, IL, USA
Abstract :
Effects of microwave (MW) fields (continuous wave, 2.45 GHz, specific absorption rates 12.5 or 125 mW/g) on input resistances and action potential (AP) intervals of neurons in ganglia of snails (Helix aspersa), at 20.9+or-0.1 degrees C were studied. At 12.5 mW/g, input resistance did not change during irradiation, but increased (p<0.05) afterward. At 125 mW/g, input resistance during irradiation was lower than in unirradiated controls. Serial correlograms changed marginally more frequently in MW experiments than in controls, but the changes had no consistent pattern. The AP firing rate was affected by MW, but the direction was not consistent across cells. When AP generation was modeled as being due to a neuronal input current, MW did not affect its mean, standard deviation, or autocorrelation. Unlike MW, temperature changes caused neurons to respond robustly and reversibly. The data suggest that MW may enhance degenerative effects such as metabolic rundown or loss of ion channel patency, but do not indicate a specific mechanism for MW interaction with neurons.
Keywords :
bioelectric potentials; biological effects of microwaves; neurophysiology; 2.45 GHz; 20.8 to 21 degC; Helix aspersa; action potential firing; degenerative effects; firing rate; ganglia; input resistance; ion channel patency; metabolic rundown; microwave effects; neuronal input current; serial correlograms; snail neurons; temperature changes; Autocorrelation; Biomedical engineering; Biomembranes; Chemical processes; Firing; Immune system; Neurons; Robustness; Signal detection; Temperature; Action Potentials; Animals; Helix (Snails); Ion Channels; Microelectrodes; Microwaves; Neurons;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on