Pacemaker potential

Pacemaker potential

In the heart, the pacemaker potential is the voltage created by impulses from an artificial electronic pacemaker or the SA node which drives the rhythmic firing of the heart.

The pacemaker potential brings the membrane potential to the threshold potential and initiates an action potential.

Distinctions among autonomic foci

In reality, the heart has several pacemakers known as autonomic foci, each which fires at its own intrinsic rate:
* "SA node:" 80 - 100 bpm
* "Atrial foci:" 60 - 80 bpm
* "Junctional foci:" 40 - 60 bpm
* "Ventricle foci:" 20 - 40 bpm

The potentials will normally travel in orderSA node -> atrial foci -> junctional foci -> ventricular foci

Pacemaker potentials are fired not only by SA node, but the other foci. However, the other firing frequencies are slower than the one of the AV node (as seen above). Normally, all the foci will end up firing at the SA node rate, not their intrinsic rate. The other foci attempt to fire at their intrinsic rate, but they are activated by the SA node before they can fire. This rapid firing causes all the foci to fire faster than their intrinsic rates, a phenomenon known as overdrive-suppression. Thus, in the normal, healthy heart, only the SA node intrinsic rate is observable.

Pathology

However, in pathological conditions, the intrinsic rate becomes apparent. Consider a heart attack which damages the region of the heart between the SA node and the atrial foci.

SA node -> |block| atrial foci -> junctional foci -> ventricular foci

The other foci will not see the SA node firing; however, they will see the atrial foci. The heart will now beat at the intrinsic rate of the atrial foci.

Induction

The firing of the pacemaker cells is induced, as the firing of action potentials in any human action-potential rising cell (like nerve cells), electrically, by the reaching of the threshold potential of the cell membrane. It is reached by the constant increase of membrane potential (induced by the special "funny channel", which by its Na+-channel activity giving rise to a current, the "funny current"). Upon the reaching of the threshold potential, the action potential is fired, and then reset.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • pacemaker potential — the slow diastolic depolarization of cell membranes that normally occurs in the sinoatrial node, atrioventricular node, and His Purkinje system; under some abnormal conditions it can also occur in atrial and ventricular muscle fibers …   Medical dictionary

  • Pacemaker action potential — A pacemaker action potential is the kind of action potential that provides a reference rhythm for the network. This contrasts with pacemaker potential or current which drives rhythmic modulation of firing rate.Some pacemaker action potentials… …   Wikipedia

  • potential — 1. Capable of doing or being, although not yet doing or being; possible, but not actual. 2. A state of tension in an electric source enabling it to do work under suitable conditions; in relation to electricity, p. is analogous to the temperature… …   Medical dictionary

  • Action potential — In physiology, an action potential is a short lasting event in which the electrical membrane potential of a cell rapidly rises and falls, following a consistent trajectory. Action potentials occur in several types of animal cells, called… …   Wikipedia

  • Cardiac pacemaker — The contractions of the heart are controlled by chemical impulses, which fire at a rate which controls the beat of the heart.The cells that create these rhythmical impulses are called pacemaker cells, and they directly control the heart rate.… …   Wikipedia

  • Cardiac action potential — The cardiac action potential is a specialized action potential in the heart, with unique properties necessary for function of the electrical conduction system of the heart.The cardiac action potential differs significantly in different portions… …   Wikipedia

  • Artificial pacemaker — Cardiac resynchronization therapy and CRT (Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy) redirect here. For the device termed a CRT D, see Implanted cardiac resynchronization device. For other uses, see Pacemaker (disambiguation). A pacemaker, scale in… …   Wikipedia

  • Biological pacemaker — The heart is endowed with specialized excitatory and conducting cells that are responsible for the generation and conduction of rhythmic impulses and contractions throughout the heart. If these cells are damaged by disease, the implantation of an …   Wikipedia

  • Artificial pacemaker — A device that uses electrical impulses to regulate the heart rhythm or to reproduce that rhythm. An internal pacemaker is one in which the electrodes into the heart, the electronic circuitry and the power supply are implanted (internally) within… …   Medical dictionary

  • Resting potential — The relatively static membrane potential of quiescent cells is called the resting membrane potential (or resting voltage), as opposed to the specific dynamic electrochemical phenomena called action potential and graded membrane potential. Apart… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”