Compound action potential explained

In neurophysiology, the Compound action potential (or CAP) refers to various evoked potentials representing the summation of synchronized individual action potentials generated by a group of neurons or muscle fibers in response to a stimulus.[1] Alike individual action potentials, CAP waveforms are typically biphasic presenting a negative and positive peak. The morphological attributes of the CAP (amplitude, spread, latency) depend on various factors including electrode placement, stimulus intensity, number of fibers recruited, the synchronization of action potentials, and conduction properties of the neural or muscular fibers.[2] [3]

In most occurrences, the CAP refers to:

Notes and References

  1. Compound action potential. compound-action-potential . 12 March 2024.
  2. Eggermont . Jos J. . Ups and Downs in 75 Years of Electrocochleography . Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience . 11 . 2017-01-24 . 2 . 1662-5137 . 28174524 . 5259695 . 10.3389/fnsys.2017.00002 . free.
  3. Kimura . Jun . Machida . Masafumi . Ishida . Tetsuro . Yamada . Thoru . Rodnitzky . Robert L. . Kudo . Yutaka . Suzuki . Shoji . Relation between size of compound sensory or muscle action potentials, and length of nerve segment . Neurology . 36 . 5 . 1986 . 0028-3878 . 10.1212/WNL.36.5.647 . 647–652. 3703263 . 39488188 .
  4. Alamri . Yousef . Jennings . Skyler G. . Computational modeling of the human compound action potential . The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America . 1 April 2023 . 153 . 4 . 2376 . 10.1121/10.0017863 . 1520-8524. 10119875 .
  5. Barkhaus . Paul E. . Nandedkar . Sanjeev D. . de Carvalho . Mamede . Swash . Michael . Stålberg . Erik V. . Revisiting the compound muscle action potential (CMAP) . Clinical Neurophysiology Practice . 2024 . 9 . 176–200 . 10.1016/j.cnp.2024.04.002 . 2467-981X. 11131082 .