1 / 27

Electrophysiology of the Heart

Electrophysiology of the Heart. J.M. Cairo, Ph.D. Telephone: 568-4246 Email: jcairo@lsuhsc.edu. Electrophysiological Properties of the Heart. Excitability Ability of the heart to respond to a stimulus Rhythmicity (Automaticity)

ettaa
Download Presentation

Electrophysiology of the Heart

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Electrophysiology of the Heart J.M. Cairo, Ph.D. Telephone: 568-4246 Email: jcairo@lsuhsc.edu

  2. Electrophysiological Properties of the Heart • Excitability • Ability of the heart to respond to a stimulus • Rhythmicity (Automaticity) • Ability of the heart to initiate a depolarization in the absence of external stimuli • Conductivity • Ability of the heart to propagate an impulse once it has been initiated

  3. Other terms… • Chronotropy • Relates to heart rate: a positivechronotropic agent will increase heart rate; a negativechronotropic agent will decrease heart rate • Dromotropy • Relates to conduction velocity: a positivedromotropic agent will increase the conduction velocity of an impulse through the heart; a negativedromotropic agent will slow the conduction velocity of the impulse

  4. Effect of Adrenergic and Cholinergic Stimulation

  5. Excitability

  6. Factors Affecting Resting Membrane Potential in Cardiac Myocytes • Macromolecules • Diffusible ions (Na+, K+, Ca++, Cl-) • Electrochemical gradients • Sodium-Potassium ATPase pump

  7. Major Cardiac Membrane Currents

  8. Membrane Currents for the Various Phases of the Ventricular Myocyte Action Potential • Phase 0 (Rapid Upstroke) • INaand ICa • Phase 1 (Early Repolarization) • Inactivation of INa and ICa, and IK (minor contribution) • Phase 2 (Plateau) • Continued entry of Na and Ca through major channels and minor membrane current due to Na-Ca exchanger • Phase 3 (Repolarization) • IK • Phase 4 (Diastolic period) • IK and Na-K pump

  9. Refractory Periods

  10. Refractory Periods • Absolute Refractory Period • Beginning of phase 0 to the beginning of phase 3 • Refractory to all stimuli • Relative Refractory Period • Beginning of phase 3 to the beginning of phase 4 • A stronger than normal stimulus will result in an AP that is less than a normal AP

  11. Rhythmicity/Automaticity

  12. Major Cardiac Membrane Currents

  13. Membrane Currents for the Various Phases of the SA node and AV node Action Potentials • Phase 0 (Slow Upstroke) • INaand ICa • Phase 3 (Repolarization) • IK • Phase 4 (Diastolic depolarization) • IK, ICa, If

  14. Principle Time Dependent and Voltage Dependent Currents

  15. Effect of Adrenergic and Cholinergic Stimulation on Pacemaker Activity

  16. Conductivity

  17. Conduction Velocities in Different Cardiac Tissue

More Related