Patient - Excitable Cells Flashcards

1
Q

Describe how the heart works with regards to external control and external modulation

A

Does not require external control, contraction cycle is spontaneous, without external trigger. Cycle involves fine coordination of different parts of the heart.
Heart function is responsive to external modulation, however

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2
Q

Give examples of external modulation of the heart

A

Autonomic nervous system, other hormones, physical factors

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3
Q

Why is the cardiac function able to be spontaneous?

A

Cells store energy as a concentration difference of ions (inside/outside)
Membrane proteins control passage of ions, creating electrical activity and excitability
electrical signal can travel rapidly to neighbouring cells
electrical activity is coupled to mechanical action (contraction)

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4
Q

Where are the specialised conducting cells in the heart

A
sinoartial node
atrioventricular node
Bundle of his 
Bundle branches
Purkinje fibres
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5
Q

Describe the appearance of cardiac muscle on a cellular level

A

Short (100-200um)
Strong, branching cells held together at intercalated discs
Electrical (gap) junctions allow cell-to-cell spread of action potentials (in 3D) without chemical synpases

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6
Q

What is the first stage of the cardiac cycle?

A

Sinoatrial node activity and atrial activation begins

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7
Q

What happens after the atria activate with regards to excitability of cells?

A

Stimulus spreads across the atrial surfaces and reaches the AV (atrioventricular) node

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8
Q

What happens after AV node activation?

A

There is a 100millisecond delay at the AV node. Atrial contraction then begins,

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9
Q

Where does the impulse go after the atria have contracted?

A

The impulse travels along the interventricular septum within the AV bundle and the bundle branches to the Purkinje fibres and, via a moderator band, to the papillary muscles of the right ventricle

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10
Q

What happens after the impulse has reached the papillary muscles of the right ventricle?

A

The impulse is distributed by the Purkinje fibres and relayed throughout the ventricular myocardium. Atrial contraction is completed, and ventricular contraction begins

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11
Q

Summarise the route of cardiac action potentials generated and spread by the pacemaker/conducting system

A

1) Produced by SA node cells
2) Depolarise and contract atrial muscle cells
3) Atrial APs depolarise AV node
4) Spread along right and left bundle branches
5) Into Purkinje cell network to contact ventricles
6) Repeated to produce cardiac cycle

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12
Q

Which cardiac conductive tissue is responsible for keeping atrial and ventricular systole separate?

A

The AV node as it delays the signal before it goes to the bundle of his

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13
Q

What percentage of cardiac cells are specialised for contraction? i.e. regular muscle cells

A

~99%

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14
Q

What percentage of cardiac cells are pacemaker and “specialised conducting” cells?

A

~1%

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15
Q

typical Na+ in mM:

Extracellular and intracellular

A

extracellular: 145mM
intracellular: 14mM

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16
Q

typical amount of K+ in mM

Extracellular and intracellular

A

Extracellular: 4mM
Intracellular: 140mM

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17
Q

Typical amount of Ca2+ in mM

extracellular and intracellular

A

extracellular: 2mM
intracellular: <0.001mM

18
Q

Describe the plasma membrane in 3 statements

A

Bilayer of phospholipids.
Proteins inserted into the bilayer.
Proteins associated with bilayer surface.

19
Q

Is the lipid bilayer an electrical insulator or an electrical conductor? What does this mean?

A

Electrical insulator - stops stuff going past i.e. segregate charged particles
Barrier to passage of most molecules

20
Q

Does the lipid bilayer allow water flow?

A

Yes

21
Q

What is the lipid bilayer permeable to?

A

Small lipophilic (nonpolar) molecules

22
Q

2 kinds of ion channel

A

Ion selective

Gated

23
Q

4 kinds of gated ion channel

A
  • Ligand gated (fast) receptor and gate in the same unit
  • Second-messenger, enzyme linked, such as GPCR
  • Voltage-gated, sensitive to transmembrane electrical potential
  • Mechanical (stretch) gated
24
Q

What creates the transmembrane electrical potential?

A

Selective permeability to charged solutes

25
Q

Define Nernst (equilibrium) potential

A

The electrical potential that balances the chemical potential (so no net movement of ions)

26
Q

give the nerst (equilibrium) potential equation

A

Vm= (60mV/z) x log ([X]out/{X}in)
Where Vm= voltage inside relative to outside, units of millivolt
[X} is the concentration of X
z is the charge of ion X (e.g. -1, +2 etc)

27
Q

How to calculate the Vm (voltage inside relative to outside) when there are multiple penetrating solutes? which equation?

A

Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz (GHK) equation

Contribution of membrane potential is weighted according to permeability

28
Q

Van’t Hoff equation states what?

A

Chemical energy is proportional to solute concentration

29
Q

What is the implication of the 3 equations below combined?
Van’t Hoff equation
Nernst equation
Goldman/GHK equation

A

Gated ion channels can rapidly change the membrane voltage, without any change in bulk intracelluar concentrations, on a time scale as fast as ~1ms (nerve action potential)

30
Q

What is the cause of differences in action potential shapes?

A

Different gated cation channels

31
Q

Describe the pacemaker potential in a nodal cell

A

Cation permeabilities vary over time, affected by autonomic nervous system inpit

32
Q

What is the action potential upstroke in a nodal cell graph due to?

A

Due to voltage-gated Ca2+ channels

33
Q

What is the action potential downstroke due to?

in nodal cells

A

Increase in concentration of K+

34
Q

What are the currents in nodal cells activated by?

A
sympathetic stimulation (AdRs, e.g. noradrenaline) 
which open Na+ and Ca2+ channels and increase their concentration
35
Q

In pacemaker cells, describe how spontaneous slow depolarisation occurs

A

Na+ (and K+)

Transient Ca2+ channels

36
Q

In pacemakers cells, describe how rapid depolarisation occurs

A

due to slow Ca2+ channels

37
Q

How does repolarisation in pacemaker cells occur

A

K+ channels

38
Q

Describe atrial and ventricular contractile muscle contractile cells action potential

A

1) Resting membrane potential
2) Depolarisation
3) Slight repolarisation
4) Plateau to maintain contraction
5) Repolarisation (further)
6) Resting membrane potential

39
Q

Describe which channels open and close and relative concentrations at the following moments with a star on

1) Resting membrane potential
2) Depolarisation*
3) Slight repolarisation*
4) Plateau to maintain contraction*
5) repolarisation (further)*

A

2) FAST Na+ channels open therefore influx of Na+
3) Na+ close therefore efflux of Na+
4) Open Slow Ca2+ channels and close Ka+ therefore influx in Ca2+ and decrease of intracellular K+
5) slow Ca2+ channels close therefore efflux of Ca2+ and opening of K+ channels

40
Q

Resting membrane potential of a contractile cardiac cell

A

-90mV

41
Q

What is the depolarised membrane potential of a contractile cardiac cell when it is at plateau stage and the membrane depolarisation is extended?
How long does this last?

A

~0mV for >100ms