Excitability changes in human sensory and motor axons during hyperventilation and ischaemia.

نویسندگان

  • I Mogyoros
  • M C Kiernan
  • D Burke
  • H Bostock
چکیده

This study was undertaken to compare the excitability changes of sensory and motor axons during hyperventilation and ischaemia, and to determine why ectopic impulse activity develops more readily during hyperventilation, and in sensory fibres. During hyperventilation for 20 min, all six subjects reported paraesthesiae in the hand and face, and four out of the six developed muscle twitching and cramps, associated with significant decreases of 20-30% in the threshold current required to produce sensory and motor potentials of constant size. During ischaemia four out of the six subjects reported paraesthesiae, but none reported muscle twitching. There were significant decreases of 15-20% in threshold for sensory and motor fibres. Ischaemia produced a marked decrease in supernormality, an increase in refractoriness and an increase in latency of the test compound sensory or motor potential, changes that were not seen with hyperventilation. The decrease in threshold during these manoeuvres was associated with a significant increase in strength--duration time constant (tau SD), indicating a relatively greater decrease in rheobase current. Using the technique of latent addition, we found that the changes in tau SD were consistent with a recently proposed model in which non-inactivating, voltage-dependent 'threshold channels' (presumably persistent Na+ channels) are active at resting potential. The failure of hyperventilation to alter conduction velocity, refractoriness or supernormality appreciably indicates that, unlike ischaemic depolarization, hyperventilation does not increase inactivation of conventional Na+ channels or activation of K+ channels, and this implies that the hyperventilation-induced increase in excitability is not the result of conventional depolarization, as seems to occur during ischaemia. These results suggest that hyperventilation has a rather selective action on the threshold channels, and they help to explain its greater effectiveness compared with ischaemia in provoking ectopic discharges. The greater expression of threshold channels in sensory than in motor fibres can explain why hyperventilation induces paraesthesiae before fasciculation and why only paraesthesiae occur during ischaemia.

برای دانلود رایگان متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

منابع مشابه

Changes in excitability and accommodation of human motor axons following brief periods of ischaemia.

1. The mechanism of post-ischaemic ectopic impulse generation in nerve is not known, and previous measurements of excitability changes in human motor axons have appeared to conflict. We have used automatic threshold tracking and different stimulus-response combinations to follow the effects on excitability of brief (5-10 min) periods of ischaemia, too short to induce motor fasciculations. Excit...

متن کامل

Why Are Sensory Axons More Vulnerable for Ischemia than Motor Axons?

OBJECTIVE In common peripheral neuropathies, sensory symptoms usually prevail over motor symptoms. This predominance of sensory symptoms may result from higher sensitivity of sensory axons to ischemia. METHODS We measured median nerve compound sensory action potentials (CSAPs), compound muscle action potentials (CMAPs), and excitability indices in five healthy subjects during forearm ischemia...

متن کامل

Effects of membrane polarization and ischaemia on the excitability properties of human motor axons.

Multiple nerve excitability measurements have been proposed for clinical testing of nerve function, since excitability measures can provide evidence of altered axonal membrane properties and are complementary to conventional nerve conduction studies. An important determinant of excitability is membrane potential, and this study was undertaken to determine the changes in a range of excitability ...

متن کامل

Is resistance to ischaemia of motor axons in diabetic subjects due to membrane depolarization?

The reasons for the resistance to ischaemia of peripheral nerves in diabetics are not well understood. We have now explored whether axonal depolarization underlies this phenomenon, as has previously been proposed. Resistance to ischaemia was determined by the new method of "threshold tracking". This method revealed an increase in excitability of the peroneal nerve at the popliteal fossa during ...

متن کامل

Burning pain: axonal dysfunction in erythromelalgia

Erythromelalgia (EM) is a rare neurovascular disorder characterized by intermittent severe burning pain, erythema, and warmth in the extremities on heat stimuli. To investigate the underlying pathophysiology, peripheral axonal excitability studies were performed and changes with heating and therapy explored. Multiple excitability indices (stimulus-response curve, strength-duration time constant...

متن کامل

ذخیره در منابع من


  با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید

عنوان ژورنال:
  • Brain : a journal of neurology

دوره 120 ( Pt 2)  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 1997