Compound Action Potential – Animal

Use the Nerve Chamber (or an existing chamber) with the Low Voltage Stimulator (SS58L) to record the compound action potential and nerve conduction from the frog sciatic nerve. Record action potentials from cockroaches, crawfish, and earthworms. Add a range of drugs and determine the effect they have on the nerve. The nerve chamber includes a drug delivery chamber (agent well) with lid to maximize the quality of the results and improve experimental repeatability.

Hardware

Name Description Cart
Nerve Conduction Chambers This acrylic, desktop Nerve  Conduction Chamber has 15 stainless steel pins for recording and stimulating a variety of different nerve preparations. Each stainless steel pin is spaced 5 mm apart to provide a variety of recording and stimulating configurations. The sockets accept 2 mm plugs and interface with the BSLCBL2A stimulation cable and the BSLCBL4B…

$420.00 - $535.00Select options

High Impedance Cables Micro-electrode interface cables for MP36/36R, MP35, MP30, or MP45* These fully-shielded, unity gain, high-impedance, differential input, electrode interface cables permit high resolution recording of biopotential signals. These interface cables incorporates dual ultra-high impedance buffer amplifiers (one for Vin+ and one for Vin-) to allow for connections to needle electrodes, wire electrodes, or very small surface electrodes…

$242.00Select options

Low Voltage Stimulator, BSL MP35 Use the low voltage stimulator with any electrode or lead with a BNC connector (such as needle electrodes or clip leads) for direct stimulation of animal or tissue preps.  Control the stimulus with the Output Control option of the BSL PRO software. Monitor the output directly on the computer without any external cable. Interface options:…

$303.00Add to cart

WHAT'S NEW

New Citations | BIOPAC in Biology Research

Biology research covers a wide variety of studies all aiming to understand living organisms...

Join the BIOPAC Community

Stay Current

Stay Connected

Request a Demonstration
Request a Demonstration