Fractional cable equation for general geometry, a model of axons with swellings and anomalous diffusion
Erick J. L\'opez-S\'anchez, Juan M. Romero, Huitzilin, Y\'epez-Mart\'inez

TL;DR
This paper introduces a fractional cable equation model for axons with complex geometries and swellings, capturing how anomalous diffusion affects voltage propagation relevant to neurodegenerative diseases.
Contribution
It develops a generalized fractional cable equation incorporating geometry and anomalous diffusion, providing insights into voltage behavior in diseased axons.
Findings
Voltage decreases with increased fractional effect.
Swellings and fractional effects both reduce voltage.
Combined swellings and fractional effects cause dramatic voltage decrease.
Abstract
Different experimental studies have reported anomalous diffusion in brain tissues and notably this anomalous diffusion is expressed through fractional derivatives. Axons are important to understand neurodegenerative diseases such as multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease. Indeed, abnormal accumulation of proteins and organelles in axons is a hallmark feature of these diseases. The diffusion in the axons can become to anomalous as a result from this abnormality. In this case the voltage propagation in axons is affected. Another hallmark feature of different neurodegenerative diseases is given by discrete swellings along the axon. In order to model the voltage propagation in axons with anomalous diffusion and swellings, in this paper we propose a fractional cable equation for general geometry. This generalized equation depends on fractional parameters and…
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