603 research outputs found

    Bypassing damaged nervous tissue

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    It is shown the principal possibility of bypassing damaged demyelinated portions of the nervous tissue, thereby restoring its normal function for the passage of action potentials

    Non-thermal influence of a weak microwave on nerve fiber activity

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    This paper presents a short selective review of the non-thermal weak microwave field impact on a nerve fiber. The published results of recent experiments are reviewed and analyzed. The theory of the authors is presented, according to which there are strongly pronounced resonances in the range of about 30-300 GHz associated with the excitation of ultrasonic vibrations in the membrane as a result of interactions with the microwave radiation. These forced vibrations create acoustic pressure, which may lead to the redistribution of the protein transmembrane channels, thus changing the threshold of the action potential excitation in the axons of the neural network. The problem of surface charge on the bilayer lipid membrane of the nerve fiber is discussed. Various experiments for observing the effects considered are also discussed.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1309.594

    Cavitation near the oscillating piezoelectric plate in water

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    It is known that gas bubbles on the surface bounding a fluid flow can change the coefficient of friction and affect the parameters of the boundary layer. In this paper, we propose a method that allows us to create, in the near-wall region, a thin layer of liquid filled with bubbles. It will be shown that if there is an oscillating piezoelectric plate on the surface bounding a liquid, then, under certain conditions, cavitation develops in the boundary layer. The relationship between the parameters of cavitation and the characteristics of the piezoelectric plate oscillations is obtained. Possible applications are discussed

    Initiation and blocking of the action potential in the axon in weak ultrasonic or microwave fields

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    In this paper, we analyze the effect of the redistribution of the transmembrane ion channels in the axon caused by longitudinal acoustic vibrations of the membrane. These oscillations can be excited by an external source of ultrasound and weak microwave radiation interacting with the charges sitting on the surface of the lipid membrane. It is shown, using the Hodgkin-Huxley model of the axon, that the density redistribution of transmembrane sodium channels may reduce the threshold of the action potential, up to its spontaneous initiation. At the significant redistribution of sodium channels in membrane, the rarefaction zones of the transmembrane channels density are formed, blocking the propagation of the action potential. Blocking the action potential propagation along the axon is shown to cause anestesia in the example case of a squid axon. Various approaches to experimental observation of the effects considered in this paper are discussed

    Cavitation nanopore in the dielectric fluid in the inhomogeneous, pulsed electric fields

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    This paper discusses the nanopores emerging and developing in a liquid dielectric under the action of the ponderomotive electrostrictive forces in a nonuniform electric field. It is shown that the gradient of the electric field in the vicinity of the rupture (cavitation nanopore) substantially increases and determines whether the rupture grows or collapses. The cavitation rupture in the liquid (nanopore) tends to stretch along the lines of the original field. The mechanism of the breakdown associated with the generation of secondary ruptures in the vicinity of the poles of the nanopore is proposed. The estimations of the extension time for nanopore in water and oil (polar and nonpolar liquids, respectively) are presented. A new mechanism of nano- and subnanosecond breakdown in the insulating (transformer) oil that can be realized in the vicinity of water microdroplets in modern nanosecond high-voltage devices is considere

    Initial stage of cavitation in liquids and its observation by Rayleigh scattering

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    A theory is developed for the initial stage of cavitation in the framework of Zel'dovich-Fisher theory of nucleation in the field of negative pressure, while taking into account the surface tension dependence on the nanopore radius. A saturation mechanism is proposed that limits the exponential dependence of the nucleation rate on the energy required to create nanopores. An estimate of the saturated density of nanopores at the nucleation stage is obtained. It is shown that Rayleigh scattering can detect nanopores arising at the initial stage of cavitation development

    Dielectric Fluid in Inhomogeneous Pulsed Electric Field

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    We consider the dynamics of a compressible fluid under the influence of electrostrictive ponderomotive forces in strong inhomogeneous nonstationary electric fields. It is shown that if the fronts of the voltage rise at a sharp, needle-like electrode are rather steep (less than or about nanoseconds), and the region of negative pressure arises, which can reach values at which the fluid loses its continuity with the formation of cavitation ruptures. If the voltage on the electrode is not large enough or the front is flatter, the cavitation in the liquid does not occur. However, a sudden shutdown of the field results in a reverse flow of liquid from the electrode, which leads to appearance of negative pressure, and, possibly, cavitation

    The surface charge of a cell lipid membrane

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    In this paper the problem of surface charge of the lipid membrane immersed in the physiological solution is considered. It is shown that both side of the bilayer phospholipid membrane surface are negatively charged. A self-consistent model of the potential in solution is developed, and a stationary charge density on the membrane surface is found. It is shown that the ions of the surface charge are in a relatively deep (as compared to kBT) potential wells, which are localized near the dipole heads of phospholipid membrane. It makes impossible for ions to slip along the membrane surface. Simple experiments for verifying the correctness of the considered model are proposed. A developed approach can be used for estimations of the surface charges on the outer and inner membrane of the cell

    Correlation of action potentials in adjacent neurons

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    A possible mechanism for the synchronization of action potential propagation along a bundle of neurons (ephaptic coupling) is considered. It is shown that this mechanism is similar to the salutatory conduction of the action potential between the nodes of Ranvier in myelinated axons. The proposed model allows us to estimate the scale of the correlation, i.e., the distance between neurons in the nervous tissue, wherein their synchronization becomes possible. The possibility for experimental verification of the proposed model of synchronization is discussed

    Charged cell membrane in electrolyte

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    An effect of membrane surface charge on mechanical properties of the phospholipid bilayer membrane and pores formation is considered. It is shown that the outer and inner surfaces of the phospholipid membrane is always subject to tension, regardless of magnitude and sign of the charges on its surface. This is due to the fact that the Debye length of the extracellular and intracellular electrolyte is always much smaller than the thickness of the membrane, and accordingly the electric field on the outer surface of the membrane is always much larger than the field inside the membrane. This result contradicts the generally accepted notion that a charged phospholipid membrane is similar to a charged capacitor in a dielectric medium and it is always subject to compression. Phospholipid bilayer membrane will be subject to compression only in a very weak electrolyte (~1mM/L), when Debye length is larger than the membrane thickness. It is also shown that the membrane surface charges lead to pore compression when the pore radius is larger than the Debye radius and to the stretching in the opposite case. Difference in the coefficients of surface and edge tension of phospholipid cell membranes can be explained by taking into account the cell membrane surface charge. Simple experiments are proposed to test the influence of the cell membrane surface charge on its mechanical properties
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