describe mechanical cells
define extensibility
ability of muscle fibers to stretch
describe electrical cells and their function
what properties do electrical cells have?
RACER
1) rhythmicity
2) automaticity
3) conductivity
4) excitability
5) refractoriness
define automaticity
ability of pacemaker cell to generate an electrical impulse spontaneously without external stimulation
define excitability
ability of a pacemaker cell to depolarize in response to an electrical stimulus
define refractoriness
period during which pacemaker cells are unresponsive to any stimulus, regardless of strength
define rhythmicity
ability of pacemaker cells to fire at regular intervals
define conductivity
the spread of electrical activity from one specialized pacemaker cell to another
what does contractility do for mechanical cells?
enables them to shorten and return to original length. it is dependent on the relationship between electrical and mechanical cells
excitation-contraction coupling
myocyte electrical activation leads to mechanical contraction
what is the purpose of the cardiac conduction system?
to maintain a regular and orderly sequence of electrical events that result in myocardial contraction
what does the conduction system consist of?
SA node, internodal tracts/pathways, AV node, bundle of His, R+L bundle branches, Purkinje fibers
SA node
- function
- location
- rate of firing
what are important properties of electrical cells in the SA node?
automaticity and rhythmicity
internodal tracts
- location
- function
AV node
- location
- function
what happens if SA node fails?
junctional pacemaker cells can take over as secondary pacemaker site, but only fire at 40-60x/min
bundle of His
bundle branches
purkinje fibers
action potential
a rapid sequence of changes in voltage across a cellular membrane
a higher concentration of ____ ions are found in the intracellular space. A higher concentration of ____ ions are found in the extracellular space.
K+
Ca & Na
polarization