Lecture 4: Action Potentials Flashcards

1
Q

Characteristics of action potentials

A
  1. All or nothing: fixed amplitude
  2. Regenerative: once started goes through full cycle
  3. Time limited: fixed duration
  4. Charge-only movement: equilibrium potentials and ion concentrations are relatively unchanged.
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2
Q

How are timing and strength of a stimulus encoded into APs?

A

Timing is encoded by the timing of the APs. Strength is encoded by the frequency.

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3
Q

What affects conductance speed of an AP?

A

Longer length constant λ = faster conductance. Membrane and internal resistances determine how much current moves along the axon and how much leaks out.

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4
Q

How does multiple sclerosis impact the body?

A

MS is an autoimmune demyelinating disease, reducing membrane resistance and decreasing conductance speed.

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5
Q

Myelin

A

Fatty substance that insulates neurons. Results in saltatory conduction between Nodes of Ranvier.

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6
Q

How does myelin affect neurons?

A

Increases speed of conduction by increasing membrane resistance, reduces metabolic cost by requiring less ion movement to propagate an AP, saves room by enabling the body to use thinner axons.

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7
Q

Action potential steps

A
  1. Maintained resting membrane potential
  2. Depolarizing stimulus brings local membrane to threshold
  3. Voltage gated Na+ channels open causing Na+ influx and rapid depolarization
  4. Na+ inactivation gate + slower K+ channel opening rapidly stops depolarization
  5. Outward current from K+ leak channels repolarizes membrane
  6. Slow-closing K+ gated channels cause hyperpolarization as Na+ channels go from inactivated to closed
  7. Closure of gated K+ channels allows membrane to return to resting potential.
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8
Q

Refractory periods

A

Refractory periods keep APs unidirectional and distinct. Absolute is when the Na+ channels are inactivated (no depolarization can reopen them). Relative is during hyperpolarization/as Na+ channels transition to closed stochastically (harder to trigger new AP)

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9
Q

How does local anesthesia affect neurons?

A

Local anesthetics like procaine and lidocaine block voltage-gated Na+ channels to prevent AP firing.

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