Wednesday, January 2, 2019

Abstract-Myelin Sheath as a Dielectric Waveguide for Signal Propagation in the Mid‐Infrared to Terahertz Spectral Range


Guozhi Liu,  Chao Chang,  Zhi Qiao,  Kaijie Wu,  Zhi Zhu,  Gangqiang Cui,   Wenyu Peng,  Yuzhao Tang,  Jiang Li, Chunhai Fan,

The myelin sheath, which serves as a dielectric waveguide for signal propagation, is experimentally confirmed using Fourier‐transform infrared microspectroscopy. The high contrast of reflectivity/refractivity between the myelin sheath and inner axon and outer medium at certain mid‐infrared to terahertz spectral range realize energy concentrates in myelin, and signal propagation is amplified when crossing the nodes of Ranvier via periodic relay.


https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adfm.201807862





The myelin sheath enables dramatic speed enhancement for signal propagation in nerves. In this work, myelinated nerve structure is experimentally and theoretically studied using synchrotron‐radiation‐based Fourier‐transform infrared microspectroscopy. It is found that, with a certain mid‐infrared to terahertz spectral range, the myelin sheath possesses a ≈2‐fold higher refraction index compared to the outer medium or the inner axon, suggesting that myelin can serve as an infrared dielectric waveguide. By calculating the correlation between the material characteristics of myelin and the radical energy distribution in myelinated nerves, it is demonstrated that the sheath, with a normal thickness (≈2 µm) and dielectric constant in nature, can confine the infrared field energy within the sheath and enable the propagation of an infrared signal at the millimeter scale without dramatic energy loss. The energy of signal propagation is supplied and amplified when crossing the nodes of Ranvier via periodic relay. These findings provide the first model for explaining the mechanism of infrared and terahertz neurotransmission through myelinated nerves, which may promote the development of biological‐tissue label‐free detection, biomaterial‐based sensors, neural information, and noninvasive brain–machine interfaces.

No comments: