PPT 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the range of the resting membrane potential?

A

-60 to -100 mV

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2
Q

What is the peak value of an action potential?

A

20 mV

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3
Q

What is the duration of an action potential in nerve and skeletal muscle cells?

Cardiac muscle cells?

A

nerve cells - 1 ms

cardiac muscle - 150-300 ms

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4
Q

What is the Absolute Refractory Period?

How long is it in nerve cells?

A

the period during depolarization and repolarization when further stimulus can not cause further action potentials

about 1 ms in nerve cells

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5
Q

What is the Relative Refractory Period?

How long in nerve cells?

A

The refractory period caused by hyperpolarization during which a stronger stimulus is required to create an action potential

  • several ms in nerve cells
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6
Q

What is ENG?

A

Electroneurogram

a signal observed as a stimulus and the associated nerve action potential propagating over the nerve’s length

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7
Q

How are ENGs measured?

What amplitudes are generally measured?

What can they diagnose?

A
  • concentric needle electrodes or Ag-AgCl electrodes
    (ex: above elbow, below elbow + wrist electrodes)
  • strong short stimulus to minimize muscle contraction
  • amplitudes approx. 10 μV
  • diagnose neural disease (slower transmission)
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8
Q

What is EMG?

A

Electromyogram

  • measures electrical activity of skeletal muscles
  • measures electric potential of muscles when they are electrically or neurologically activated
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9
Q

What is SMUAP?

How many phases does it have generally?

Duration?

Amplitude?

A

Single Motor Unit Action Potential

  • bi- or triphasic
  • 3-15 ms
  • 100-300 μV
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10
Q

What is EEG?

A

Electroencephalogram

  • records electrical activity along the scalp to detect electrical activity of neurons in the brain
  • used for diagnosis of epilepsy primarily
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11
Q

What are the 4 main frequency ranges of brain waves?

A
  • Delta - deep sleep (delta = deep)
  • Theta - beginning stage of sleep
  • Alpha - principal resting rhythm (alpha = principal)
  • Beta - background activity when tense or anxious (beta = background)
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12
Q

What is EGG?

A

Electrogastrogram

  • measurement of the rhythmic deploarization/repolarization of gastric smooth muscle (starting in mid-corpus every ~20 sec)
  • recorded by abdomen electrodes… 3 along antral axis and one reference electrode
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13
Q

What is Carotid Pulse measurement?

It has 4 parts… what are they?

A

Carotid Pulse (CP)

  • measurement of pressure over the carotid artery
  1. P (Percussion) Wave - left ventricle ejection
  2. T (Tidal) Wave - reflected pulse from upper body
  3. D (Dicrotic) Notch - closure of aortic valve
  4. DW (Dicrotic Wave) - reflected pulse from lower body
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14
Q

What is VMG?

How is it detected?

A

Vibromyogram

  • mechanical measurement of skeletal muscle contraction
  • detected with contact microphones or accelerometers
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15
Q

What is VAG?

A

vibroarthrogram

  • recording of vibration signal from a joint during articulation
  • arthritic or other diseased joints may produce grinding sounds
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