02/03/16 Flashcards
1
Q
Sequential Excitation of Chambers of the Heart
A
- Particular cardiac cells located in the sinoatrial (SA) node have the ability to initiate an action potential
- Spreads through the muscle cells in the upper part of the heart (right/left atria)
- Via intercalated discs
- Results in contraction of the two chambers
- Normal sinus rhthym; SA node initiates action potentials at 60-100/min
- Conducted in the atrioventricular (AV) node
- Coordinates the sequential contraction of the upper (atrial) and lower (ventricular) chambers of the heart
- Conducted in the atrioventricular (AV) node
- If SA node fails to provide action potential, AV node can independtly generate action potentials at 40-60 bpm
- Subsequent transmission of the action potential to the ventricles
- Via specialized heart cells (cardiomyocytes) in the right and left bundle branches and Purkinje fibers that spread throughout the ventricles
- These conduction cells contain increased numbers of sodium ion channels and mitochondria while containing fewer cardiac muscle fibers
- If both the SA and AV nodes fail to provide an action potential, the Purkinje fibers or ventricular myocytes can also produce a coordinated contraction at rates slower than the AV node.
2
Q
Ion Channels and Pumps in the Heart
A
3
Q
Ionic components of the action potential of the heart
A
- Rising phase: Na+ channels are activated, rapid depolarization, Na+ infux
- Cells start to repolarize: outward flow of K+ ions, Na+ channels inactivate
- Ca2+ channels open (L-type) and ions flow inwards; K+ current is still flowing out (Ca2+ influx, K+ efflux)
- Activation of Ca2+ channels are slower and remain open longer compared to Na+
- K+ efflux: delayed rectifier K+ channels
- Plateau is caused by no net current and membrane potential does not change
- Continued K+ efflux, Ca2+ removed by Na+/Ca2+ exchanger
- Resting phase: hyper polarization
4
Q
Pacemaker potential during diastole
A
- Phase 4:
- Diastolic repolarization requires HCN channels (hyperpolarization-activated, cyclic nucleotide gated ion channels)
- Pacemaker cells are capable of initiating self-depolarization during phase 4
5
Q
Action Potentials in Cardiac Tissues
A
- SA node→atria→AV node→ventricles
- AV node is the “gate keeper”
- As electrical impulses reach AV node, a delay in conduction allows atria time to contract and fully empty their contents before ventricular contraction
- Purkinje fiber activation:
- Large, fast inward current
- Rapid conduction
- A lot of Na+ channels
- P: atrial contraction
- PR: atria→AV node
- PQR: ventricular depolarization
- QRS: depolarization of ventricles
- QT: ventricular action potential
- T: repolarization
6
Q
Sodium Channel Gating
A
- Closed→change in membrane potential→open→inactivated→(hyperpolarizes-recovery)→closed
- Membrane responsiveness
7
Q
Vmax and Effective Refractory Period
A
- Vmax or dV/dt
- Rate of rise of the action potential n mV/sec
- Slope
- deltaV is the time from close to open
- (-)deltaV is time from inactive to closed (recovery time)
- ERP: Effective Refractory Period
- Period from beginning of action potential until cell can fire another action potential
- Membrane responsiveness–enough Na+ channels to fire
- Modified by arrhythmia drugs
8
Q
Arrhythmia Definitions
- Bradycardia
- Tachycardia
- Flutter
- Fibrillation
A
- Bradycardia: Resting heart rate below 60 bpm
- Tachycardia: Steady heart rate about 100 bpm
- Flutter: Regular contractions above 200 per minute
- Fibrillation: Irregular, asynchronous contractions about 200 per minutes
- Atrial Fibrillation
- Ventricular Fibrillation
9
Q
Normal ventricular excitation vs. Ventricular Fibrillation
A
- Ventricular Fibrillation: AKA cardia arrest
- Heart no longer pumps but cells are still firing
- No coordination of contraction
- Rapid stimulation of ventricles
10
Q
Cellular pathologies that cause arrhythmias
A
- Abnormal autonomic regulation
- Tissue malformation
- Tissue damage and remodeling
11
Q
Cellular pathologies that cause arrhythmias: Abnormal Autonomic Regulation
A
- Excessive sympathetic tone:
- Sinus tachycardia: rapid heart rate, but normal sinus rhythm
- Excessive parasympathetic tone:
- Sinus bradycardia: slow heart rate, but normal sinus rhythm
- AV block: atrial action potentials without ventricular action potentials
12
Q
Cellular pathologies that cause arrhythmias: Tissue Malformation
A
- Abnormal conduction pathways
- Example: Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome
- Abnormal tissue pathway
- Example: Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome