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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2012 Oct 17.
Published in final edited form as: Cephalalgia. 2011 Aug 4;31(12):1254–1265. doi: 10.1177/0333102411408360

Figure 4.

Figure 4

Simulating the effects of extracellular sodium concentration, [Na +]o, on neuronal firing in a simple neuron soma built in NEURON (equations are in the Methods). (a) The earlier AP (pink) at [Na +]o of 160 mM, and the faster firing rate when [Na +]o is increased from 145 to 160 mM. (b) The sodium current peaks earlier in 160mM [Na +]o (pink) compared to that in 145mM [Na +]o (blue). (c) The potassium current peaks earlier in 160mM [Na +]o (pink) compared to that in 145mM [Na +]o (blue). (d) When [Na +]o increases from 145 to 160 mM, the change in the firing rate was plotted against Na,K-ATPase density and revealed that the altered AP rate increased more distinctly above an Na,K-ATPase density of 2.1 μA/cm 2. An Na,K-ATPase density of 2.2 μA/cm 2 (arrow) was used in all of our other simulations. (e) With [Na +]o between 100 and 200mM and Na,K-ATPase density of 2.2 μA/cm 2, the firing rate of the model neuron increased when [Na +]o reached 130 mM. The lines a and b represent the range between normal and the 17% increase in sodium observed in the 23Na MRI studies after NTG.