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Membrane potential Hodgkin-Huxley theory

The widespread evidence that Planck s steady state liquid junction potential is not a sufficient basis to the interpretation of membrane potentials in living systems raises as a question the real origin of potentials in living systems. Correspondingly, it makes questionable the basis of the Hodgkin-Huxley theory. [Pg.72]

Until the 1950s, the rare periodic phenomena known in chemistry, such as the reaction of Bray [1], represented laboratory curiosities. Some oscillatory reactions were also known in electrochemistry. The link was made between the cardiac rhythm and electrical oscillators [2]. New examples of oscillatory chemical reactions were later discovered [3, 4]. From a theoretical point of view, the first kinetic model for oscillatory reactions was analyzed by Lotka [5], while similar equations were proposed soon after by Volterra [6] to account for oscillations in predator-prey systems in ecology. The next important advance on biological oscillations came from the experimental and theoretical studies of Hodgkin and Huxley [7], which clarified the physicochemical bases of the action potential in electrically excitable cells. The theory that they developed was later applied [8] to account for sustained oscillations of the membrane potential in these cells. Remarkably, the classic study by Hodgkin and Huxley appeared in the same year as Turing s pioneering analysis of spatial patterns in chemical systems [9]. [Pg.254]

The membrane potential in biology came to prominence in the days in which electrode phenomena were treated exclusively in terms of equilibrium thermodynamics. Between 1892 (Nernst ) and 1911 (Donnan " ), three treatments were given of membrane potentials. They form such a durable part of electrochemistry, not because of their importance per se, or even of their direct relevance to biological phenomena, but because one of them was the origin of the best-known of bioelectrochemical theories, the Hodgkin-Huxley-Katz mechanism for the passage of electricity through nerves. [Pg.70]


See other pages where Membrane potential Hodgkin-Huxley theory is mentioned: [Pg.401]    [Pg.432]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.297]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.410]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.408]    [Pg.45]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.258]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.472]    [Pg.8]   


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