4. Action Potentials & Electrical Excitability Flashcards

0
Q

What is meant by the all or nothing rule of action potentials?

A

If the threshold value is met, it will always give a complete response, otherwise no response is given.

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1
Q

How is an action potential generated?

A

Increasing membrane permeability to Na+ (bringing the membrane potential closer to ENa, +61mV)

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2
Q

Repolarisation involves what changes to which channels?

A

Inactivation of Voltage Gated Na+ channels

Opening of Voltage Gated K+ channels

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3
Q

What is the absolute refractory period and how does it affect the direction in which an impulse travels?

A

When Voltage Gated Na+ Channels are either all open or inactivated hence no matter how much stimulation is received, another action potential will not occur.
This means that an action potential will only travel in one direction along an axon.

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4
Q

What is the relative refractory period?

A

Where Voltage Gated Na+ channels are recovering and returning to the closed state from the inactivated state.
As the number of channels inactivated decreases, the excitability returns to normal.

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5
Q

What is the structure of Voltage Gated Na+/Ca2+ channels?

A

One peptide
Four homologous repeats each with 6 transmembrane domains
One domain is voltage sensitive
Contains inactivation particle

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6
Q

What is the structure of Voltage Gated K+ channels?

A

Four peptides
6 transmembrane domains
One domain is voltage sensitive
Contains a p region that contributes to pore sensitivity

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7
Q

Name an anaesthetic that blocks Na+ channels to stop an action potential.

A

Procaine

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8
Q

Name the order of nerve types and sizes in which procaine blocks conduction best in.

A

1 Small myelinated
2 Non myelinated
3 Large myelinated

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9
Q

Under which electrode does electrical stimulation occur?

A

Cathode (negative)

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10
Q

Under which electrode is excitability reduced?

A

Anode (positive)

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11
Q

What is diphasic recording?

A

Where both electrodes are extracellularly recorded to measure conduction velocity

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12
Q

What is monophasic recording?

A

Where one electrode is purposely put in a damaged part hence only the other is used to record conduction velocity

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13
Q

How do you calculate conduction velocity?

A

Distance between stimulating and recording electrodes divided by time gap between stimulus and action potential being recorded

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14
Q

How is an action potential conducted?

A

Local current causes the change in membrane potential in one area to spread to adjacent areas of the axon, causing them to reach threshold and fire an action potential

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15
Q

What is the relationship between local current spread and conduction velocity?

A

The further down the axon it spreads, the higher the conduction velocity.

16
Q

Name three factors that can increase conduction velocity.

A

High membrane resistance
Low membrane capacitance
Large axon diameter ( as this leads to low cytoplasmic resistance)

17
Q

What does reducing the capacitance at the internodal region via myelination lead to?

A

Saltatory conduction, the local current induced at one node can travel far enough down to the next node to depolarise that one

18
Q

Which is faster, local current spread or action potential spread?

A

Local current spread, hence why saltatory conduction is the quickest

19
Q

What is multiple sclerosis?

A

Demyelination of axons in the CNS

20
Q

What is Devic’s disease?

A

Demyelination of optic and spinal axons

21
Q

Name two diseases which involve demyelination of axons in the peripheral nervous system

A

Landry Gullain Barre syndrome

Charcot Marie Tooth disease

22
Q

Immediately after demyelination of an axon why is there complete failure to conduct an impulse?

A

Increased membrane capacitance preventing the channels at the nodes being raised to threshold

23
Q

Why after a period of recovery after demyelination does the ability to conduct an impulse return?

A

Redistribution of nodal ion channels (effectively becomes an unmyelinated nerve)