Publications by authors named "P Schlett"

Neural activation by infrared nerve stimulation (INS) gains growing interest as a potential alternative to conventional electric nerve stimulation, since unambiguous advantages like contact-free operation, enhanced spatial selectivity and lack of (electrical) stimulation artifacts are promising for both future electrophysiological research and clinical application. For the systematic investigation of laser nerve activation, we recently introduced a novel experimental approach. Comprising a defined focused beam profile, it enables remote controlled, contact-free pulsed laser stimulation of the rat sciatic nerve, simultaneous to high-speed temperature measurement in vivo.

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Article Synopsis
  • Glioma patients experience seizures due to tumor effects on brain physiology; a study used rat glioma cell line C6 to explore their electrical activity.
  • The research found that although glioma cells are not naturally electrically active, they exhibit bursts of electrical activity influenced by changes in pH levels in their environment.
  • Increased electrical activity from glioma cells was linked to extracellular acidification, suggesting that this acidosis may disrupt nearby healthy neurons and contribute to seizures in patients.
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Microelectrode arrays (MEA) record extracellular local field potentials of cells adhered to the electrodes. A disadvantage is the limited signal-to-noise ratio. The state-of-the-art background noise level is about 10 μVpp.

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Measuring the electrical activity of large and defined populations of cells is currently a major technical challenge to electrophysiology, especially in the picoampere-range. For this purpose, we developed and applied a bidirectional transducer based on a chip with interdigitated gold electrodes to record the electrical response of cultured glioma cells. Recent research determined that also non-neural brain glia cells are electrically active and excitable.

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