Term
how long is the complete cardiac cycle? |
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Definition
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Term
what are the typical systemic and pulmonary circulation pressures? |
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Definition
RA - 2 RV - 25/0 Pulm Art - 15 Lungs - 10 Pulm Vein - 6 LA - 5 LV - 120/0 Aorta - 120/80 Arteries - 93 Capillaries - 20 |
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Term
what drives blood flow in the circulatory system? |
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Definition
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Term
what three factors are required for effective heart pumping? |
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Definition
AV contraction delay, synchronous contraction of ventricular cells, no tetanus |
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Term
how long is the absolute refractory period in the heart? |
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Definition
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Term
what type of cells are purkinje fibers made of? |
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Definition
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Term
what role do the SA and AV nodes, and purkinje fibers play in heart contraction? |
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Definition
SA node acts as pacemaker AV node delays AP to ventricles purkinje fibers relay AP to ventricles |
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Term
what path do electrical impulses follow in the heart? |
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Definition
SA node, atrial muscle, AV node, purkinje fibers, ventricular muscle |
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Term
what type of channels contribute to a fast action potential? |
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Definition
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Term
what channels are responsible for the plateau of the AP in cardiomyocytes? |
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Definition
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Term
What channels are responsible for inducing diastole? |
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Definition
inward rectifier K channels |
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Term
name the different phases of the ventricular cell AP and which parts are considered systole? |
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Definition
phase 0 - depolarization phase 1 - peak phase 2 - plateau phase 3 - repolarization phase 4 - diastole |
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Term
describe how the voltage gated K channels (inward rectifier) function during the ventricular AP. |
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Definition
during systole they are inactivated, when the cell becomes repolarized enough during phase 3 the channels open again and are able to maintain the polarized state (diastole) |
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Term
what phase of the ventricular AP is important for heart arrythmias and is the target of anti-arrhythmics? which channels does this correspond with? |
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Definition
phase 3, delayed rectifier K channels |
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Term
describe the order of ion channels during the ventricular AP. |
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Definition
Na, T-Ca, and L-Ca channels open (influx) causing spike and plateau, delayed rectifier K channels open repolarizing cell, inward rectifier K channels then open inducing diastole |
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Term
describe the flow of the Na/Ca channel during ventricular AP. |
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Definition
during systole the rapid influx of Na forces Ca out (phase 0-1), then the influx of Ca forces Na out (phase 1-2) |
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Term
when are leak channels active during the ventricular AP and what role do they play? |
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Definition
they are constitutively expressed, to maintain the resting membrane potential |
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Term
what actions are responsible for phase 3 of the ventricular AP? |
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Definition
inactivation of Ca channels, delayed rectifier K channels, and finally inward rectifier K channels |
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Term
what are the similarities/differences between delayed and inward rectifier K channels? |
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Definition
both are voltage dependent, but delayed channels are activated by depolarization, whereas inward channels are inactivated by depolarization |
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Term
what role do ATP gated K channels play in the ventricular AP? |
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Definition
they are normally closed due to presence of ATP, but open during ischemia |
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Term
what role does increasing the activity of delayed K channels play in the ventricular AP duration? |
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Definition
it decreases the duration and increases HR |
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Term
list the flow of ions during the different ventricular AP phases. |
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Definition
0 - influx Na 1 - eflux K 2 - influx Ca, eflux K 3 - eflux K 4 - eflux K |
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Term
how does the tension in purkinje fibers upon excitation compare to other muscle fibers and what implications does this have? |
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Definition
it is much smaller, it is meant for conduction not contraction |
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Term
what plays a role in the delayed response between the AP and contraction of cardiac muscle fibers? |
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Definition
the series elastic element |
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Term
how does the duration of the cardiomyocyte AP prevent tetanus? |
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Definition
it overlaps and often exceeds the contractile response preventing temporal summation |
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Term
true or false, the cardiac muscle cell does not have a membrane potential threshold for contraction? |
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Definition
false, it does have a threshold |
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Term
true or false, the pacemaker cells and ventricular cells have similar depolarization curves and why? |
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Definition
false, ventricular cells have fast depolarization whereas pacemaker cells have gradual depolarization |
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Term
what role does depolarization play in pacemaker cardiomyocytes? |
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Definition
the gradual depolarization prevents Na channels from producing a sharp spike |
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Term
what channels are utilized in pacemaker depolarization/repolarization? |
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Definition
Ca and K channels, respectively |
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Term
what channels are not present in pacemaker cardiomyocytes? |
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Definition
inward rectifier K channels voltage dependent Na channels |
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Term
list the phases of the pacemaker cardiomyocyte AP and which is responsible for controlling the HR? |
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Definition
phase 1 - polarized state phase 2 - gradual diastolic depolarization phase 3 - threshold resulting in self induced AP |
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Term
what three factors contribute to the rate of the pacemaker AP? |
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Definition
magnitude of diastolic prepotential, rate of diastolic depolarization, the level of the threshold potential |
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Term
describe the role of funny currents in the pacemker AP. |
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Definition
they are active during diastole, allowing influx of ions and helping to contribute to gradual depolarization |
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Term
describe the role flow of Ca during pacemaker cell depolarization and the Na/Ca exchange pump. |
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Definition
an initial influx of Ca near edge of cell triggers the internal release of Ca as well as the Ca/Na exchange pump to take in Na and kick out Ca near the edge |
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Term
true or false, the heart is controlled by both the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems? |
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Definition
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Term
what affect does acetylcholine/epinephrine have on HR and what part of the AP cycle is affected? |
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Definition
they slow it down and speed it up, respectively; the diastolic depolarization phase |
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Term
what branch of nervous system is acetylcholine/epinephrine from? |
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Definition
vagal innervation of parasympathetic, and sympathetic innervation respectively |
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Term
define chronotropic affect. |
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Definition
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Term
define dromotropic affect. |
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Definition
enhances AV node conduction |
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Term
define spontaneous affect. |
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Definition
enhances automatic activity |
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Term
define ionotropic affect. |
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Definition
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Term
phosphorylation of what channel helps to control the diastolic depolarization timeframe and what affect does it have? |
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Definition
L type Ca channel, it causes the channels to be open longer causing a more dramatic membrane current |
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Term
what is overdrive suppression? |
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Definition
the difference in firing rates of the various pacemaker cells in the heart, because the SA node fire the fastest they assume control of the HR, and if the heart slows down too much the next pacemaker cells take over |
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Term
what happens to AP duration as the HR increases, what causes this and why is it important? |
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Definition
the duration shortens due to K channels being activated sooner; because the heart needs time to fill the ventricles, if duration didn't change heart would always be in systole |
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Term
which region of the heart has a longer conduction pathway, the endocardium or epicardium? |
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Definition
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Term
what three factors affect cardiomyocyte conduction? |
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Definition
AP upstroke velocity, cell size and cytoplasmic complexity, number and complexity of gap juncitons |
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Term
true or false, the upstroke velocity and conduction velocity is determined by inward current? |
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Definition
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Term
true or false, the smaller the cell diameter the faster the conduction velocity? |
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Definition
false, the larger the diameter the faster the velocity |
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Term
true or false, cardiomyocytes are electrically isolated from each other? |
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Definition
false, they are connected via gap junctions |
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Term
true or false, gap junctions can close? |
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Definition
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Term
list some potential causes for MI. |
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Definition
reduction of blood flow/lack of O2 intracellular pH and ATP decrease opening of ATP gated K channels membrane pump failure (K leaks out) decrease in resting membrane potential AP decrease conduction velocity decrease |
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Term
what affect does and increase in extracellular K have on cardiomyocyte AP and what can the cells do to try and prevent its affects? |
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Definition
the AP is reduced in size the AP is delayed the AP duration shortens
cells close gap junctions to prevent spread of depolarization |
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