My professor put something up the other day that I'm having trouble understanding since it does seem counter-intuitive. Why would adding sodium to the inside of a cell make it hyperpolarize, and adding it to the outside of the cell make it depolarize?
The math seems to work based on the examples he's written, but I'm having trouble understanding what the equations are actually saying about what's happening.
Put a whole bunch of positively charged Na into a cell, and logic is telling me that the inside is going to become positive relative to the outside, and you'll get depolarization.
The math seems to work based on the examples he's written, but I'm having trouble understanding what the equations are actually saying about what's happening.
Put a whole bunch of positively charged Na into a cell, and logic is telling me that the inside is going to become positive relative to the outside, and you'll get depolarization.
