PHYSIOLOGICAL BASIS OF NERVE FIBRE STIMULATION, SUMMATION AND THE CONCEPT OF MINIMUM DOSE: A NEUROPHYSIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE
*Dr. A. K. Dwivedi
ABSTRACT
The excitability of nerve fibres and the mechanisms by which stimuli evoke physiological responses are fundamental aspects of neurophysiology. Nerve fibres respond to stimuli only when the stimulus intensity reaches a critical threshold level capable of generating an action potential. However, stimuli below this threshold—referred to as subminimal or subthreshold stimuli—do not produce a response independently but may contribute to excitation through the process of summation. Summation occurs when multiple weak stimuli combine either spatially or temporally to produce a depolarization sufficient to reach the firing threshold. The physiological understanding of minimum stimulus, subminimal stimulus, and summation is essential for explaining reflex activity, neural integration, and coordinated bodily responses. This article elaborates on the mechanisms of nerve fibre stimulation, the electrophysiological basis of action potential generation, and the physiological processes of summation. It further discusses the conceptual relevance of these mechanisms to therapeutic principles such as minimum dose used in homoeopathic medicine. The discussion integrates classical neurophysiological concepts established by Sherrington with modern explanations found in the works of Guyton and Ganong.
Keywords: NERVE FIBRE STIMULATION, ACTION POTENTIAL, MINIMUM STIMULUS, SUBTHRESHOLD STIMULUS, SUMMATION, NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, REFLEX PHYSIOLOGY etc……
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