Tonic And Stimulus-Dependent Conduction of Excitation Blocking in The Nerve by Means of Antiarythmisant Pentilaymalin

2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. A. Mangusheva
1987 ◽  
Vol 126 (3) ◽  
pp. 275-288 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seiichi Urushibara ◽  
Mitsuo Kawato ◽  
Kazuo Nakazawa ◽  
Ryoji Suzuki

I have in a previous paper described investigation on the conduction of excitation in Mimosa pudica . It was there shown that the various characteristics of the propagation of excitation in the conducting tissue of the plant are in every way similar to those in the animal nerve. Hence it appeared probable that any newly found phenomenon in the one case was likely to lead to the discovery of a similar phenomenon in the other. A problem of great interest which has attracted my attention my attention for several years is the question whether, in a conducting tissue, excitation travels better with or against the direction of an electric current. The experimental difficulties presented in the prosecution of this enquiry are very numerous, the results being complicated by the joint effects of the direction of current on conductivity and of the poles on excitability. As regards the latter, the changes of excitability in the animal nerve under electrotonus have been demonstrated by the well-known experiments of pflüger. In a nerve-and-muscle preparation, the presence of a pole P is shown to induce a variation of excitability of a neighbouring point S. When P is kathode, the excitability of the point S, near it, is enhanced; stimulation of S, previously ineffective, now becomes effective, and the resulting excitation is transmitted to M, causing response of the muscle. Conversely, the application of anode at P causes a depression of excitability of S. Stimulus previously effective now becomes ineffective. In this manner the transmission of excitation may be indirectly modified by the polar variation of excitability of the stimulated point (fig. 1 a ).


1965 ◽  
Vol 208 (4) ◽  
pp. 715-719 ◽  
Author(s):  
Makoto Kobayashi

Effects of Na+ and Ca++ on the generation and the conduction of excitation were studied by using a pelvis ureter specimen of cat. Action potentials were recorded simultaneously from the renal pelvis and the various regions of the ureter, and they were used to indicate the arrival of excitation. In Na+-deficient solutions, both the frequency of excitation and the conduction velocity decreased gradually, and finally a conduction block occurred at the border between the renal pelvis and ureter. In Na+-free solution spontaneous excitation was not observed in most cases. When excess Ca++ was added to Na+-free solution, spontaneous excitation was restored, but the concentration of Ca++ necessary for the restoration had to be at least twice that in normal Ringer-Krebs solution. The difference between the ureter and taenia coli was considered with regard to the role that Na+ and Ca++ play in the generation of spontaneous excitation.


1960 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 135-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. E. Karrer

The interconnections and the surfaces of the striated muscle cells which occur in thoracic and in lung veins of the mouse were studied with the electron microscope. The osmium-fixed tissues were embedded in methacrylate or in araldite and sectioned with a Porter-Blum microtome. Many preparations were stained before embedding with phosphotungstic acid or after sectioning with uranyl acetate. Typical intercalated discs are observed in this muscle. They are similar to the discs found in heart muscle. These intercalated discs represent boundaries between separate muscle cells. Along the discs, cells are joined in planes normal to their myofilaments. The same cells are also joined in planes parallel to the myofilaments by means of lateral interconnections. These lateral cell boundaries are in continuity with the intercalated discs. Three morphologically distinct parts occur within the lateral cell interconnections: One is characterized by small vesicles along the plasma membrane, the second part has the structure of desmosomes, and a third part represents an external compound membrane (formed by the two plasma membranes of the adjoining cells) and is termed "quintuple-layered cell interconnection." Small vesicles and plasma membrane enfoldings along the free surface of muscle cells are interpreted as products of a pinocytosis (phagocytosis) process. Some of them are seen to contain small membrane-bounded bodies or granules. The free cell surface shows a characteristic outer dense layer ("basement membrane") which accompanies the plasma membrane. The topographic relation of this dense layer with the plasma membrane seems to vary in different preparations. The significance of this variation is not well understood. On two occasions a typical arrangement o vesicles and tubules was observed at Z band levels, just beneath the plasma membrane. These structures are believed to represent endoplasmic reticulum. Their possible significance for the conduction of excitation is discussed.


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