The sodium channel band shapes the response to electric stimulation in retinal ganglion cells
暂无分享,去创建一个
S. Fried | N. Desai | A. Molnar | J Jeng | S Tang | A Molnar | N J Desai | S I Fried | S. Tang | J. Jeng
[1] R. H. Propst,et al. Visual perception elicited by electrical stimulation of retina in blind humans. , 1996, Archives of ophthalmology.
[2] S. Kelly,et al. Perceptual efficacy of electrical stimulation of human retina with a microelectrode array during short-term surgical trials. , 2003, Investigative ophthalmology & visual science.
[3] G. Matthews,et al. Polarized distribution of ion channels within microdomains of the axon initial segment , 2007, The Journal of comparative neurology.
[4] S. Fried,et al. Axonal sodium-channel bands shape the response to electric stimulation in retinal ganglion cells. , 2009, Journal of neurophysiology.
[5] W. Grill,et al. Inversion of the current-distance relationship by transient depolarization , 1997, IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering.
[6] A. M. Rush,et al. Electrophysiological properties of two axonal sodium channels, Nav1.2 and Nav1.6, expressed in mouse spinal sensory neurones , 2005, The Journal of physiology.
[7] Joseph F Rizzo,et al. Thresholds for activation of rabbit retinal ganglion cells with an ultrafine, extracellular microelectrode. , 2003, Investigative ophthalmology & visual science.
[8] Richard H. Masland,et al. The Diversity of Ganglion Cells in a Mammalian Retina , 2002, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[9] Eberhart Zrenner,et al. Electronic subretinal implants allow blind retinitis pigmentosa patients to read letters and recognize the direction of fine stripe patterns , 2009 .
[10] E. Chichilnisky,et al. Electrical stimulation of mammalian retinal ganglion cells with multielectrode arrays. , 2006, Journal of neurophysiology.
[11] T. Velte,et al. A computational model of electrical stimulation of the retinal ganglion cell , 1999, IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering.
[12] J. Troy,et al. Extracellular stimulation of mouse retinal ganglion cells with non-rectangular voltage-controlled waveforms , 2009, 2009 Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society.
[13] F. Mantelli,et al. Mucin-type O-glycans in tears of normal subjects and patients with non-Sjögren's dry eye. , 2009, Investigative ophthalmology & visual science.
[14] V. Bennett,et al. Ankyrin-G coordinates assembly of the spectrin-based membrane skeleton, voltage-gated sodium channels, and L1 CAMs at Purkinje neuron initial segments , 2001, The Journal of cell biology.
[15] J. Fohlmeister,et al. Mechanisms by which cell geometry controls repetitive impulse firing in retinal ganglion cells. , 1997, Journal of neurophysiology.
[16] J. González-Cueto,et al. Analysis of the Selective Nature of Sensory Nerve Stimulation Using Different Sinusoidal Frequencies , 2008, The International journal of neuroscience.
[17] B. Kampa,et al. Action potential generation requires a high sodium channel density in the axon initial segment , 2008, Nature Neuroscience.
[18] A. Milam,et al. Preservation of the inner retina in retinitis pigmentosa. A morphometric analysis. , 1997, Archives of ophthalmology.
[19] B. Jones,et al. Neural remodeling in retinal degeneration , 2003, Progress in Retinal and Eye Research.
[20] J. Caldwell,et al. Sodium channel Na(v)1.6 is localized at nodes of ranvier, dendrites, and synapses. , 2000, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[21] Joseph F. Rizzo,et al. Activation of retinal ganglion cells in wild-type and rd1 mice through electrical stimulation of the retinal neural network , 2008, Vision Research.
[22] E. Strettoi,et al. Remodeling of second-order neurons in the retina of rd/rd mutant mice , 2003, Vision Research.
[23] B. Wilhelm,et al. Blind Retinitis Pigmentosa Patients Can Read Letters and Recognize the Direction of Fine Stripe Patterns With Subretinal Electronic Implants , 2009 .
[24] Wentai Liu,et al. Retinal Prosthesis , 2018, Essentials in Ophthalmology.
[25] J. Fohlmeister,et al. Modeling the repetitive firing of retinal ganglion cells , 1990, Brain Research.
[26] W. Grill,et al. Sites of neuronal excitation by epiretinal electrical stimulation , 2006, IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering.
[27] P. L. Carras,et al. Site of action potential initiation in amphibian retinal ganglion cells. , 1992, Journal of neurophysiology.
[28] Gary Matthews,et al. Functional Specialization of the Axon Initial Segment by Isoform-Specific Sodium Channel Targeting , 2003, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[29] David Tsai,et al. Direct activation and temporal response properties of rabbit retinal ganglion cells following subretinal stimulation. , 2009, Journal of neurophysiology.
[30] Enrica Strettoi,et al. Retinal organization in the retinal degeneration 10 (rd10) mutant mouse: A morphological and ERG study , 2007, The Journal of comparative neurology.
[31] Gislin Dagnelie,et al. Patients Blinded by Outer Retinal Dystrophies Are Able to Identify Letters Using the Argus TM II Retinal Prosthesis System , 2010 .
[32] J. Fohlmeister,et al. Impulse encoding across the dendritic morphologies of retinal ganglion cells. , 1999, Journal of neurophysiology.
[33] C A Curcio,et al. Preservation of ganglion cell layer neurons in age-related macular degeneration. , 2001, Investigative ophthalmology & visual science.
[34] J. L. Stone,et al. Morphometric analysis of macular photoreceptors and ganglion cells in retinas with retinitis pigmentosa. , 1992, Archives of ophthalmology.
[35] Avi Caspi,et al. Feasibility study of a retinal prosthesis: spatial vision with a 16-electrode implant. , 2009, Archives of ophthalmology.