Action potential Flashcards
What is the “time constant” with respect to the cell membrane?
- The amount of time it takes for the voltage to change by a certain percentage (63%) of the eventual new steady state value 2. Function of the axon’s electrical resistance and capacitance (tao = RC)
What is the “space constant” with respect to the cell membrane?
- Distance between the injection site of current and the point where the steady state transmembrane voltage change has decayed by 63% from its peak value2. Describes how signal decays over distance
What are the properties of the action potential?
- Spread in nondecremental fashion - stay same size as spread2. Threshold for generation of the action potential - if a membrane depolarization reaches threshold, it induces an action potential through a self-regenerative process3. All or none - size of action potential does NOT depend on the size of the triggering stimulus
What creates depolarization phase?
- Opening of sodium channels (activation gate)2. Sodium rushes in making cell membrane less negative
What creates the repolarization phase?
- Sodium channels close (inactivation gate)2. Potassium channels open so K rushes out of cell
What creates the hyperpolarization phase?
If K channels remain open long enough, cell gets close to K Nernst potential
When can the voltage gated Na channel switch from inactivated to resting?
Only when the membrane is repolarized toward its negative resting potential
What are the properties of the voltage gated K channel?
- Activated after a brief delay by strong depolarizations and inactivates very slowly2. Responsible for repolarization phase of action potential3. Probability that K channels will open is less than that for Na for same amount of membrane depolarization
What channel is responsible for repolarization phase of action potential?
K channel
What are two concepts of threshold?
- Sufficient depolarization to trigger an action potential2. Value of membrane potential at which inward flow of Na exceeds the passive outward flow of K
What factors influence the AP threshold?
- Na channel2. K channel3. Calcium concentration
How does hypocalcemia affect the Na channel?
When the extracellular concentration of calcium is lowered the probability that a sodium channel will be opened at any voltage is increased
How is the threshold affected by lowered extracellular calcium concentrations?
- A smaller than normal amount of depolarization will bring an excitable membrane to its firing threshold2. Hypocalcemia causes neuromuscular excitability
What are the symptoms of hypocalcemia?
- Neuropsychiatric2. Neuromuscular 3. Cardiovascular4. Autonomic
What is Chvostek’s sign?
- A possible sign of latent tetany associated with hypocalcemia2. Contraction of the muscles of the eye, mouth, or nose elicited by tapping over the facial nerve in front of the ear3. Neither sensitive nor specific - absent in 1/3 of patients and present in 10% of normal people