11/7 Cardiac Arrhythmia: Mechanism - Coromilas Flashcards

1
Q

great powerpoint - look at it first

A
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2
Q

graphic representation of electrical info in EKG

attach picture

A

note:

SA node and AV node APs are different from cardiomyocytes

  • SA/AV nodes: Na/Ca influx [check]
    • beta blockers and Ca blockers have more effect here
  • cardiomyocyte: rapid Na influx
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3
Q

electrical activation of the heart

relative speed of SA node, AV node, conduction pathways

A

SA node conduction approx 50-60cm/s

AV node conduction approx 5cm/s

  • diff is important bc it allows ventricles time they need to fill before contraction and also filters out aberrant rapid signalling

conduction pathways approx 100-200cm/s

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4
Q

major cardiac ion channels/currents

attach image

A

inward depolarizing currents

  • INa: fast Na current
  • ICa,L: Ca current
  • INa/Ca: Ca out, Na in (NCX)

outward repolarizing currents

  • K currents
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5
Q

refractory period

A

absolute: no AP can be triggered

relative: fewer Na channels available, so only small AP can be triggered

supranormal: back to normal, regular AP can be triggered

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6
Q

types of cardiac arrhythmias

A
  1. bradycardias (< 60bpm)
  2. tachycardias (> 150bpm)
  • supraventricular (originate in atria or AV node → have narrow complexes)
  • ventricular (originate in ventricles → have wide complexes)
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7
Q

mechanisms of arrhythmias

just look at pic

A

can be FOCAL (arising from one area of heart) or REENTRANT (travelling/circulating around heart)

  1. abnormal impulse generation
  • incr automaticity of SA node
  • enhanced automaticity of latent pacemakers
  • abnormal automaticity
  • triggered automaticity
    • early afterdepolarizations
    • delayed afterdepolarizations
  • decr automaticity of SA node (brady)
  1. abnormal impulse conduction
  • decremental conduction and block (brady)
  • reentry
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8
Q

normal mechanism of automaticity

AV node

A

-60mV at RMP (-90 in myocardiocytes)

  • slow depol via funny current
    • HCN channels: hyperpol-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated channels: slow inward Na current
    • rapid depol via Ca current
  • repol via K current
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9
Q

autonomic modulation of SA node

A

HCN channels have SNS, PSNS receptors

  • adrenergic (beta1) → incr cAMP → incr activity
  • muscarinic → decr cAMP → decr activity
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10
Q

overdrive suppression

A

hyperpolarizing net current: Na/K pump → 3 Na out, 2 K in

depolarizing durrent: If (funny current)

  • non-SA node cells receive their trigger for depol from SA node
  • increased Na influx → greater expression of Na/K ATPases that hyperpolarize, prevent depolarization at intrinsic rate (unless conduction block knocks out the pacemaker signal)
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11
Q

hierarchy of pacemakers

A

sinus node (SA node) : 60-100bpm

>

AV jx (AV node) : 40-60bpm

>

ventricular (myocytes) : 20-40bpm

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12
Q

arrhythmias due to normal automaticity

A

alteration in normal automaticity

  • sinus tachycardia or bradycardia

escape rhythms

  • junctional/ventricular escape complexes
  • escape rhythms
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13
Q

abnormal impulse generation

A

enhanced automaticity of latent pacemakers

  • jxal premature complexes
  • jxal tachycardia
    • catecholamines
    • myocardial infarction
    • digitalis toxicity
  • abnormal automaticity (cells that generate automaticity, evidenced by acquisition of slow depol potential)
    • ventricular premature complexes
    • ventricular tachycardia
    • atrial premature complexes
    • atrial tachycardia
  • triggered activity
    • early afterdepolarizations: depols that occur prior to full repolarization, poss due to long AP duration and influx of Ca during plateau phase
      • ex. Torsades de Pointes ventricular tachycardia
    • delayed afterdepolarization
      • digitalis induced tachycardias
      • catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia
      • RV outflow tract tachycardias
      • repetitive monomorphic VT
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14
Q

summary: automaticity

A
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15
Q

abnormal impulse conduction

decremental conduction and block

A
  • fibrosis (Lev-Lenegre Syndrome) → affects SA/AV nodes
  • MI → scar tissue with slow conduction
  • hyperkalemia

electrophysiologic mechanisms:

  • Na channel inactivation
  • gap jx abnormalities
  • prolonged refractoriness
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16
Q

gap jx, connexons, connexins

A

gap jx exist at intercalated discs

  • ion channels between adj cells comprised of 2 connexons apiece (one on either side of the jx)
  • each connexon composed of 6 connexins w 4 transmembrane domains
17
Q

reentry

A

combination of unidirectional block and slow conduction

  • unidirectional block: prevents progression of signal that would normally be conducted through soon-to-be-reentrant-circuit tissue
  • slow conduction: allows the refractory period of the signal that WAS conducted (before being blocked) to expire, such that reentrant signal can proceed through the circuit

circle videos at approx 1:07

18
Q

arrhythmias due to reentry

A
  • monomorphic ventricular tachycardia after MI
  • atrio-ventricular reentrant tachycardia
  • AV nodal reentrant tachycardia
  • atrial flutter
  • atrial tachycardias post-op for congenital heart disease
19
Q

summary: reentry

A
20
Q

ventricular pre-excitation

A

aka “WPW” (Wolff Parkinson White Syndrome)

  • short PR interval
  • delta wave
  • blurred upstroke
  • wide QRS