CVS - Electrical/Molecular Mechanisms In The Heart Flashcards

1
Q

What is responsible for setting up the potassium gradient in a cardiac myocyte?

A

Movement of K+ ions out of the cell (down their concentration gradient)

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2
Q

At which point does the net outflow of K+ from the myocyte stop?

A

When Ek is reached

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3
Q

Why is the resting membrane potential of a cardiac myocyte not the same as Ek?

A

The cell has a very small permeability to other ion species at rest

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4
Q

Why must cardiac myocytes be electrically active?

A

It allows them to fire action potentials, which trigger a rise in cytosolic [Ca2+], allowing actin and myosin interaction

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5
Q

What causes the upstroke of the ventricular cardiac acton potential?

A

Opening of voltage-gated Na+ channels, leading to an influx of Na+

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6
Q

What causes the initial repolarisation of the cardiac myocyte during action potential?

A

Transient voltage gated K+ channels

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7
Q

What causes the plateau in the cardiac action potential?

A

Opening of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels causes an influx of Ca2+w high balances with K+ efflux

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8
Q

What causes the repolarisation in the cardiac action potential?

A

Effluent of K+ through voltage gated K+ channels

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9
Q

What are HCN channels?

A

“Hyperpolarisation-activated, cyclic nucleotide-gated” channels which allow influx of Na+ ions which depolarise the cells.

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10
Q

Why is the SA node said to not have a proper resting membrane potential?

A

The cells are never properly at rest, as they spontaneously depolarise

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11
Q

What is the ‘funny current’?

A

Otherwise known as the pacemaker potential, this is a mixed sodium-potassium current that activates upon hyperpolarisation at voltages below -50 mV

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12
Q

What is responsible for the upstroke in SA node action potential?

A

Opening of V-gated Ca2+ channels

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13
Q

What is responsible for the repolarisation of the SA node action potential?

A

Opening of voltage-gated K+ channels

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14
Q

Why does the SA node set the rhythm of the heart?

A

It is the fastest to depolarise

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15
Q

What is caused by action potentials firing too slowly?

A

Bradycardia

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16
Q

What is caused by action potentials failing?

A

Asystole

17
Q

What is caused by action potentials firing too quickly?

A

Tachycardia

18
Q

What is caused by electrical activity in the heart becoming random?

A

Fibrillation

19
Q

What is the normal range of plasma K+ concentration?

A

3.5 to 5.5 mmol/L

20
Q

What is hyperkalaemia?

A

This is when the plasma K+ concentration is too high (over 5.5 mmol/L)

21
Q

What is hypokalaemia?

A

This occurs when plasma concentration is too low (less than 3.5 mmol/L)

22
Q

Why are cardiac myocytes so sensitive to changes in [K+]?

A

K+ permeability dominates the resting membrane potential, and the heart has many different kinds of K+ channels

23
Q

What is the effect of hyperkalaemia on the cardiac myocytes?

A

If plasma K+ is raised, Ek is less negative so the membrane depolarises a bit. This inactivates some of the voltage-gated Na+ channels and slows the upstroke.

24
Q

What is the main cardiac risk associated with hyperkalaemia?

A

The heart can go into asystole

25
Q

What are the treatments for hyperkalaemia?

A
  • calcium gluconate
  • insulin and glucose

These will not work if the heart has already stopped

26
Q

At what point is hyperkalaemia described as severe?

A

Above 6.5 mmol/L

27
Q

What is the effect of hypokalaemia?

A

Lengthens the action potential and delays repolarisation

28
Q

Why is hypokalaemia associated with ventricular fibrillation?

A

Longer action potentials can lead to ‘early after depolarisations’ (EADs) which lead to oscillations in the membrane potential. These can result in ventricular fibrillation.

29
Q

How is calcium released into cardiomyocytes?

A

Depolarisation opens L-type Ca2+ channels in T-tubule system. Localised Ca2+ entry opens CICR channels in the SR - these release 75% of calcium influx, while 25% enters across the sarcolemma

30
Q

How is the tone of blood vessels controlled?

A

Contraction and relaxation of vascular smooth muscle cells, located in tunica media and present in arteries, arterioles and veins

31
Q

What must be phosphorylated in order to enable actin-myosin interaction in vascular smooth muscle?

A

The regulatory myosin light chain

32
Q

What activates the contraction of vascular smooth muscle?

A

Noradrenaline activates a1 GPCR receptors

33
Q

How is contraction regulated in vascular smooth muscle?

A
  • Ca2+ binds to calmodulin and activates Myosin Light Chain Kinase (MLCK)
  • MLCK phosphorylates the myosin light chain to permit interaction with actin