Study of conduction in a new model of the myelinated nerve fiber

A new mathematical model of the myelinated nerve fiber was applied to the study of conduction behavior. This model represents the myelinated nerve fiber as a multiaxial equivalent electric circuit incorporating separate intra-axonal, periaxonal and extra-axonal longitudinal conductive pathways with independent representations of the myelin sheath versus the underlying axolemmal membrane. A detailed anatomical representation of the node is included, with the periaxonal space extending to the nodal compartment. Both amphibian and mammalian nerve fibers were modeled. Model results show a physiological conduction velocity of 57.6 m/s for 17.5- mu m-diameter mammalian nerve fiber at 37 degrees C with a change in conduction velocity versus temperature closely correlated to experimental findings. The periaxonal space width and the axon radius in the paranodal region are shown to have a strong influence on conduction velocity.<<ETX>>

[1]  M. Rasminsky,et al.  The effects of temperature on conduction in demyelinated single nerve fibers. , 1973, Archives of neurology.

[2]  J. Halter,et al.  A distributed-parameter model of the myelinated nerve fiber , 1988, Proceedings of the Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society.