PNB 2265 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Palpitations, University Of Manchester, Dihydropyridine

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The heart is a pump that is stimulated to contract by depolarization of the cell membrane. The heart generates a unique action potential known as the cardiac action potential (cap) The cap can be detected on the surface of the body through ecg. Similar to action potential in neurons and skeletal muscle. Resting potential = -80 to -90 mv: mediated by na/k atpase. Membrane channels are different: many voltage gated k+ channels, known as inward rectifier channels, voltage gated calcium channels, voltage gated sodium channels. What an action potentials is, it its propagated and the roles of channels. 0 phases 0-4, 200-300 ms: phase 4, at rest between contractions, phase 0 rapid depolarization, phase 1 rapid repolarization, phase 2 long, slow repolarization, phase 3 rapid repolarization to resting potential, back to phase 4 and repeat. Outward potassium current, voltage gated channels: known as delayed rectifier or kdr (delayed rectifier) channels, maintains the membrane potential.

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