Application of near infra-red laser light increases current threshold in optic nerve consistent with increased Na+-dependent transport
Increases in the current threshold occur in optic nerve axons with the application of infra-red laser light, whose mechanism is only partly understood. In isolated rat optic nerve, laser light was applied near the site of electrical stimulation, via a flexible fibre optic. Paired applications of lig...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Pflügers Archiv 2024-05, Vol.476 (5), p.847-859 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Increases in the current threshold occur in optic nerve axons with the application of infra-red laser light, whose mechanism is only partly understood. In isolated rat optic nerve, laser light was applied near the site of electrical stimulation, via a flexible fibre optic. Paired applications of light produced increases in threshold that were reduced on the second application, the response recovering with increasing delays, with a time constant of 24 s. 3-min duration single applications of laser light gave rise to a rapid increase in threshold followed by a fade, whose time-constant was between 40 and 50 s. After-effects were sometimes apparent following the light application, where the resting threshold was reduced. The increase in threshold was partially blocked by 38.6 mM Li
+
in combination with 5
μ
M bumetanide, a manoeuvre increasing refractoriness and consistent with axonal depolarization. Assessing the effect of laser light on the nerve input resistance ruled out a previously suggested fall in myelin resistance as contributing to threshold changes. These data appear consistent with an axonal membrane potential that partly relies on temperature-dependent electroneutral Na
+
influx, and where fade in the response to the laser may be caused by a gradually diminishing Na
+
pump–induced hyperpolarization, in response to falling intracellular [Na
+
]. |
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ISSN: | 0031-6768 1432-2013 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00424-024-02932-1 |