To determine whether functional Ca2+ channels are present in vestibular dark cells, changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) due to K+ applications were measured using the Ca(2+)-sensitive dye (fura-2) and patchclamp whole-cell recordings were made in dark cells isolated from the ampullae of the semicircular canal of the guinea pig. Exchange of the external solution with a buffer medium containing a high K+ concentration (80 mM K+ or 150 mM K+) caused a concentration-dependent increase in [Ca2+]i in vestibular dark cells. Application of 1 microM nifedipine as a Ca2+ channel antagonist completely blocked the increase in [Ca2+]i. Further treatment with 10 microM BAY K 8644 as a Ca2+ channel agonist caused an increase in [Ca2+]i. In the patch-clamp whole-cell recordings a 1-s depolarizing pulse given into the dark cell in the presence of a high barium concentration (50 mM Ba2+) induced an inward current. In determining the current-voltage relationship, a current was detected at a potential that depolarized at-50 mV and was maximal at +10 mV. This inward current was completely blocked by 1 mM La3+ as a Ca2+ channel antagonist. These findings suggest the presence of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels in dark cells, which have a presumed function in the regulation of [Ca2+]i in the vestibular endolymph.
We have developed a high-frame-rate laryngoscope that can measure the vibration distribution of a human vocal fold in real time at hundreds of hertz. Our laryngoscope can extract a vocal-fold contour at 4000 fps as 20 pairs of its left and right border points from 256 × 512-pixel images to quantify left-right asymmetry of vocal-fold vibrations. Experiments on artificial vocal-fold-like vibrations of a silicon rubber membrane were performed to confirm the laryngoscope's effectiveness, and the vocal folds of human subjects, including patients with laryngeal diseases, were examined under clinical conditions.
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