L16. Drugs affecting Heart Rate and Dysrhythmias Flashcards
What is the parasympathetic influence on the heart?
Parasympathetic: Regulating role in resting HR (rest and digest system)
Acts via ACh on Muscarinic Receptors
Affect the RATE on both the SA and AV nodes
Bradycardia
By affecting K+ channels
What is the sympathetic influence on the heart?
Sympathetic is important to recruitment in Flight of Fight mode
Acts via adrenaline and noradrenaline on the heart and vasculature (mainly by B1 receptors)
On the SA node and on myocardial cells to affect the RATE and the FORCE of contractility
Tachycardia and positive INOTROPIC action
By affecting Ca+ Channels
What does the electrical activity of the heart depend on?
The balance and operation of ion channels
Describe the sino-atrial pacemaker action of the SA cells
Cells of the SA node have pacemaker activity meaning they depolarise spontaneously (no need to an action potential trigger) at a regular rate.
Without regulation it beats at 100 beats per minute
What is the resting membrane for a SA pacemaker cell?
-60 mV meaning that it is greatly negative on in the inside of the cell vs. positive on the outside. (There is a tendency for positive ions to flow into the cell)
Draw the SA action potential and describe the phases of it
Phase 0: Depolarisation where Ca channels open and flow into the cell
Phase 3: Repolarisation: K+ channels open and let K+ out
Phase 4: Spontaneous depolarisation (pacemaker) that lets Na and Ca in
How does the parasympathetic nervous system affect the atrial action potential?
ACh transmission to Muscarinic receptors of the heart leads to the opening of K channels: extends repolarisation
This leads to more K flowing out to the cell meaning it is harder for the Na and Ca to flow.
ACh binds to GPCR and decreases cAMP
= takes longer to reach threshold
How does the sympathetic nervous system affect the atrial action potential?
Noradrenaline and adrenaline bind to B1 receptors (GPCRs) leading to increased cAMP and opens Calcium channels
Opening Calcium channels speeds up the depolarisation phase (steeper slope of phase 4)
= increased rate of firing from the SA node
Risk: trigger dysrhythmia
What is the resting membrane potential of ventricular cells?
Much lower than atrial at -90 mV (takes more energy for Na and Ca to move through) and hence a more rapid depolarisation is required to reach threshold.
Draw and describe the phases of the ventricular action potential,
Phase 0: Rapid Depolarisation: Na channels in
Phase 1: Rapid repolarisation: K+ out
Phase 2: Plateau: Ca in and K out
Phase 3: Repolarisation: K+ out (Ca channels close)
Phase 4: Stable membrane potential
What does the term dysrhythmia mean? What are the signs and symptoms of it?
An abnormal rhythm of heart beating
Palpatations, can be more forceful contractions or dropped beats.
Can either be benign or fatal
Symptomes are nonspecific: shortness of breath, fainting, fatigue, chest pain
What are the three main mechanism of dysrhythmia formation?
- Altered FORMATION of the impulse
- Altered route/BLOCKAGE of the impulse
- Triggered events
What affects the formation of the impulse?
- Automacy of the pacemaker cells damaged or altered
- Abnormal generation of APs at sites other than the SA (or AV) nodes
What are the mechanisms of conduction block?
- Damage or death of cells making up the conduction pathway (Eg. Infarction)
- SA failure means the AV node has to pick up the automated setter of pace (slower rate)
- Reentry: impulses flow backwards through the system (creating loops) through damaged tissue: increased rate and/or extra beats
What are some considerations when treating dysrhythmia?
Consider the no treatment option (many treatment drugs have arrhythmic activity)
Make an accurate diagnosis (ECG)
Manage underlying causes of the arrhythmia