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- Leslie A Geddes.
- Department of Biomedical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907-1296, USA. geddes@ecn.purdue.edu
- IEEE Trans Biomed Eng. 2004 Jan 1;51(1):176-81.
AbstractThe strength-duration curve is a plot of the threshold current (I) versus pulse duration (d) required to stimulate excitable tissue. On this curve are two points: 1) rheobase (b) and 2) chronaxie (c). Rheobase is the threshold current for an infinitely long-duration stimulus. Chronaxie, the excitability constant, is the duration of a pulse of current of twice rheobasic strength. The mathematical expression for the strength-duration curve is I = b(1 + c/d). Although there are many published values for chronaxie for various excitable tissues, the range of variability for a given tissue type is quite large. This paper identifies five factors that can affect the accuracy of chronaxie measurement and shows that the most reliable values can be obtained with a rectangular pulse delivered from a constant-current source.
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