¾ÅÐãÖ±²¥

Research | Queen’s University Canada

Custom Search Form

    Search Type

    Old is Gold

    The multifunction nerve stimulator S8 was invented in the mid-20th century. It was commonly used to inject current into muscles and cardiac cells to elicit a response. Using frog muscles and hearts, an Italian physician, Luigi Galvani, showed that electricity was inherent in organic tissue. Over the last fifty years or so electro-therapy has shown a very rapid development. This equipment is still functional. I am using the stimulator to send electrical impulses into neurons and record subsequent changes in nerve activity characterized by the movement of charged molecules across the cell membrane.
    Submission Year: 
    2016-17
    Photographer's affiliation: 
    Graduate student
    Academic areas: 
    Graduate Studies and Postdoctoral Affairs
    Health Sciences
    Photo: 
    A multifunction nerve stimulator S8
    Categories: 
    Grad student
    School of Graduate Studies
    Faculty of Health Sciences
    School of Medicine
    Department of Biomedical and Molecular Sciences
    Interdisciplinary research in materials, computational analytics and human-machine interactions
    Materials Discovery and Molecular Design
    Location of photograph: 
    Botterell Hall, Queen's University
    Photographer's name: 
    Alamjeet Kaur Chauhan
    Display Photographers Affiltion + Faculty or Department: 
    Graduate Student, Biomedical and Molecular Sciences