Excitable Tissues Flashcards
Excitable Tissue Definition
Cells and Tissues that utilise electrical signals as a form of comunication, reflecting their electrical excitablity
Major types of Excitable Tissues:
Neurons & the three types of muscles (skeletal, cardiac, smooth)
How do you record the membrane potential in a single cell
submerged cell in solution. attach voltmeter with one lead inside cell and one out to recprd th different between intra and extracellular compartments = represents potential difference across membrane.
The Nernst equation can be used when the membrane is selectively permeable when intracellular and extracellular concentrations are known
Membrane Potential
It is the membrane potential of a cell at rest which is -80mV. At rest, the membrane potential is polarised as the intracellular charge is different to the extracellular charge.
Depolarisation Definition
When membrane potential decreases from RMP (i.e. the inside of the cell becomes LESS negative and the membrane becomes LESS polarised)
Repolarisation Defintion
membrane potential increases back towards RMP (i.e. the inside of the cell becomes MORE negative)
Hyperpolarisation Definition
membrane potential increases from the RMP (i.e. the inside of the cell becomes MORE negative & membrane potential becomes MORE polarised)
Polarised Definition
when the inside of an excitable cell is negatively charged and it is different to the oustide
Graded Potentials
- observed when an excitable tissue cell is subjected to an excitatory or inhibitory stimulus.
- produces small transient changes in MP (approx 1-30mV)
- size GP is directly proportional to size of stimulus
- is localised; doesnt effect whole cell
Depolarising Graded Potential:
- produced by exitatory stimulus
- causes transient depolarisation from RMP
- MP becomes less negative
Hyperpolarising Graded Potential:
- produced by inhibtory stimulus
- causes transient hyperpolarisation from RMP
- MP becomes more negative
Action Potential
- large, fast, complex, changes in MP caused by large excitatory stimulus
- affects whole cell
- depolarising grade potential needs to be large enough to reach threshold (-65mV ish)
- if stimulus is not big enough, no action potenital
What is the ‘All or Nothing Principle’?
If threshold is not reached; there is no action potential
purpose of action potential?
travels along cells to enable effective communication between disparate parts of body.
What are the 3 Phases of an action potential:
- Depolarisation: period between threshold & peak. MP becomes less negative
- Repolarisation: period between peak & RMP. MP becomes more negative
- Hyperpolarisation: MP becomes more negative before returning to RMP