Optic Nerve Microcirculation: Fluid Flow and Electrodiffusion
Yi Zhu, Shixin Xu, Robert S. Eisenberg, and Huaxiong Huang

TL;DR
This study models fluid and ion transport in the optic nerve, revealing water-driven convection's key role in ion movement and potassium buffering, with implications for understanding CNS fluid dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a coupled mathematical model of water and ion transport in the optic nerve, highlighting the dominant role of water convection in glial ion buffering.
Findings
Water convection dominates inside glial domains.
Water flow significantly aids potassium buffering.
Electrodiffusion mainly influences extracellular flow.
Abstract
Complex fluids flow in complex ways in complex structures. Transport of water and various organic and inorganic molecules in the central nervous system are important in a wide range of biological and medical processes [C. Nicholson, and S. Hrab\v{e}tov\'a, Biophysical Journal, 113(10), 2133(2017)]. However, the exact driving mechanisms are often not known. In this paper, we investigate flows induced by action potentials in an optic nerve as a prototype of the central nervous system (CNS). Different from traditional fluid dynamics problems, flows in biological tissues such as the CNS are coupled with ion transport. It is driven by osmosis created by concentration gradient of ionic solutions, which in term influence the transport of ions. Our mathematical model is based on the known structural and biophysical properties of the experimental system used by the Harvard group Orkand et al…
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