A Tridomain Model for Potassium Clearance in Optic Nerve of Necturus
Yi Zhu, Shixin Xu, Robert S. Eisenberg, and Huaxiong Huang

TL;DR
This paper introduces a three-compartment model for potassium clearance in the optic nerve of Necturus, emphasizing the roles of glia, extracellular space, and axons, and highlights the importance of convective flow driven by osmotic pressure.
Contribution
It presents a novel tridomain model that incorporates convection, diffusion, and electrical migration, aligning with experimental data and emphasizing glial buffering and convective clearance mechanisms.
Findings
Glia plays a key role in potassium buffering.
Potassium clearance is mainly driven by convective flow.
The model aligns well with experimental data from Orkand et al.
Abstract
The accumulation of potassium in the narrow space outside nerve cells is a classical subject of biophysics that has received much attention recently. It may be involved in potassium accumulation \textcolor{black}{including} spreading depression, perhaps migraine and some kinds of epilepsy, even (speculatively) learning. Quantitative analysis is likely to help evaluate the role of potassium clearance from the extracellular space after a train of action potentials. Clearance involves three structures that extend down the length of the nerve: glia, extracellular space, and axon and so need to be described as systems distributed in space in the tradition used for electrical potential in the `cable equations' of nerve since the work of Hodgkin in 1937. A three-compartment model is proposed here for the optic nerve and is used to study the accumulation of potassium and its clearance. The…
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