Foundation neuro Flashcards
Define action potential
depolarisation opens sodium, potassium or calcium channels gated by membrane voltage leading to temporary reversal of membrane polarity (inside positive)
What is a theshold stimulus
the minimum required inward Na current to overcome the K+ outward current and meet the depolarisation level required to initiate an action potential (10-15mV)
What is a threshold potential
◦ Threshold potential is the transmembrane potential which must be achieved to produce depolarisation of the membrane, ~55 mV
What does the all or none ffect mean with reference to action potentials? How is information transmitted then?
- All-or-none effect is the finding that a subthreshold stimulus will produce no response, whereas all suprathreshold stimuli will produce an identical and maximal response.
- INformation signal depends on frequency not size of action potentials
What are the 3 states of Na channels?
Resting
Inactive
Open
Resting Na ionic gates refers to?
activation (m) gate closed, activation gate (h) open thus channel closed
Depolarisation occurs when what confirmational change in the sodium channel happens?
m gate opens allowing Na entry; h gate begins to close slowly allowing brief period of entry (~<1-20 milliseconds) - sodium moves down electrochemical gradient and thus the cell moves towards the sodium equilibrium potential
Why is there a time limited opening of Na channels
m gate opens allowing Na entry; h gate begins to close slowly allowing brief period of entry (~<1-20 milliseconds) - sodium moves down electrochemical gradient and thus the cell moves towards the sodium equilibrium potential
Once a sodium channel is closed what state is it in?
‣ Inactivated - h gate closed, persists through repolarisation, returns to resting state when repolarisation complete due to negative membrane potential. Full recovery of the (h) gates takes 100ms longer or even longer after membrane potential restored
* It is notable that this slightly prolonged opening of the h gates contributes to an absolute refractory period
* The relative refractory period extends for 10-15msec longer due to hyperpolarisation depicted below
Why is the relative refractory period slightly longer than the absolute refractory period
Slight hyperpolarisation occurs in repolarisation after which sodium gates may be open BUT a suprathreshold stimulus needed to overcome this slight hyperpolariasation
‣ Inactivated - h gate closed, persists through repolarisation, returns to resting state when repolarisation complete due to negative membrane potential. Full recovery of the (h) gates takes 100ms longer or even longer after membrane potential restored
* It is notable that this slightly prolonged opening of the h gates contributes to an absolute refractory period
* The relative refractory period extends for 10-15msec longer due to hyperpolarisation depicted below
How to calcium concentration affect muscles and nerves?
Hypocalcaemia increases nerve and muscle excitability
What effect does myelin have? What cell produces myelin
- Support cells called glia in the brain and spinal cord (Schwann cells) wrap cell membranes around axons acting as an insulator and increased resistance, reduces the capacitance of the membrane allowing action potentials to only really fire at nodes
◦ Permits saltatory conduction with propogation from one node to another by local circuits
What is conductance
The ease at which ions move across the membrane (opposite of resistance)
What is capacitance?
- Capacitance = the ability of the membrane to store electrical charge; and the capacitance fo the a nerve fibre is due to the two layered lipid matrix
‣ Amount of charge is proportional to surface area I.e. large diameter holds more charge
‣ Additionally capacitance varies with axon diametre - thicker axon means more capacitance, but axial resistance falls with increasing thickness
Length or space constant is?
- The decay of electronic potential per unit length along the axon is given by the length or space constant
◦ Defined as the distance from the stimulus to the point at which voltage falls to 36.7% of maximal potential