Term
What happens to cardiac outpute in fibrillation and asynchronous beats? |
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Definition
- If heart rate is too fast, less diastole, less filling, lower CO.
- Fibrillation: heart beating in syncronous way, have different part of heart contracting at different times, heart cannot pump blood.
- Asyncronous beats can make CO go very low |
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Term
What mechanism does an action potentia depend on? |
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Definition
Influx of Ca+ or Na+, most of the time it's Sodium |
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Term
What are Gap Junctions and why are they important in heart cells? |
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Definition
Gap junctions are pores that allow electrical waves to propogate rapidly throughout the heart. This means any electrical event in one cell with occur in another as well, key when coordinating muscle fibers so that the heart can pump effectively |
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Term
What is a refractory period? |
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Definition
Period during which cells are "recovering" from an action potential, therefore, are unable to fire another action potential. This has to do with voltage gated channel of sodium being inactive, closed, or open state. |
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Term
What three populations are heart cells broken up into? |
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Definition
1. Impulse-generation cells (pacemakers)
2. Rapid-Conduction cells
3. Essentially contractile cells |
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Term
What is the purpose of impulse generation cells? |
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Definition
- Determine heart rate
- Small group of cells that has pacemaker activities, continuous depolarization
- Always in phase 4 depolarization?
- Characterized by calcium influx and potassium efflux to control charge of cytosol. |
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Term
How fast do cells in the heart depolarize? |
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Definition
SA Node - 75 times/min
AV Node - 50 times/min
Bundle of His - 30 times/min
Note: Majority of heart is NOT a pacemaker |
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Term
What are the speed of rapid conduction cells, and where are they located? |
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Definition
Bundle of His Conduction Velocity - 4 m/s
Rest of heart's Conduction Velocity - 0.5 m/s
- Lots of gap junctions
- Most rapid conduction cells are Bundle of His
- Problems in these conduction systems could cause asynchronous beats |
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Term
What about Essentially Contractile Cells? |
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Definition
- These cells do not depolarize spontaneously like pacemaker cells
- Major cell of the heart
- No phase IV depolarization
- When threshold is reached VGC of Na+ open, and there is an AP
- Next a VGC of Ca+ opens and causes a second phase
- Ca+ that enters during plateau phase is what is used during contraction |
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Term
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Definition
- If impulse travels towards left arm, this is positive, and there will be a spike
- If impulse travels toward your right arm, this is nevative, and there will be a depression on the EKG
- If impulse travels straight down to the ground, nothing will show up on EKG |
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Term
What does each wave on an EKG stand for? |
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Definition
P wave - contraction of the atrium
QRS - Contraction of the ventricles
T- relaxation of ventricles, beginning of diastole
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Term
EKG only measures what kind of waves? |
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Definition
Depolarization waves (is T wave an exception then?) |
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Term
What two types of arrhythmias are there? |
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Definition
Bradyarrhythmias and Tacharrhythmias |
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Term
What is a bradyarrhythmia? |
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Definition
- Abnormally low heart rate
- Often due to structural defect of the heart
- Theray often involves implantation of a mechanical pacemaker |
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Term
What is a tachyarrhythmia? |
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Definition
- abnormally high heart rate
- Common clinical problem
- Causes could be drugs, ischemia/infarction, cardiomyopathy, etc.
- Treated with antiarrhythmic drugs
- Can be synchronous or nonsynchronous
- Bradyarrhythmias are for surgeons, not pharmacists |
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Term
In what two ways could arrhythmias form? |
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Definition
Disturbances in impulse formation: increase in automaticity at SA or ectopic focus, or afterdepolarizations
Disturances in impulse conduction: Unilateral blocks (re-entry) |
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Term
What are a few ways to increase automaticity, which disturbs impulse formation? |
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Definition
- Reducing threshold potential increases automaticity because you reach depolarization easer, may have 3 AP instead of 2.
- Increasing slope of phase IV may also increase automaticity
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Term
What is it called, and what HAPPENS, when you have increased automaticity in the SA node? |
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Definition
- Also known as Sinus Tachycardia
- Heart rhythm is normal because same pacemaker is used
- Heart RATE is faster
- Synchronous |
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Term
What happens when you have an Ectopic Atrial Tachycardia? |
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Definition
- Occurs somewhere else other than SA, acts as a pacemaker, COMPETES with the SA Node
- Refractory period MAY change
- Increased automaticity by an irregular pacemaker
- P wave happens early on, premature heart beat, not spaced evenly, ASYNCHRONOUS in general. |
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Term
Afterdepolarizations are another way to disturb impulse formation, what are they? |
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Definition
- 2 types, early and late
- Early depolarization finds a cell that is not refractory, causes an AP in another cell.
- Delayed afterdepolarization is when the cell repolarizes, but when it should be refractory, you get a delayed depolarization, and if that reaches threshold you get another AP. |
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Term
What is a Torsades de Pointes? |
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Definition
- When cells in the ventricles suffer an afterdepolarization
- Generates rhythm within the ventricle
- Lots of QRS, contract without specific rhythm.
- Ventricles keep contracting in synchronous, regardless of what the pacemaker is doing. |
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Term
Disturbances in impulse conduction, like unilateral blocks, can present themselves in a couple different ways. What are two arrhythmias in which unilateral block is the mechanism? |
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Definition
- Atrial Flutter and Ventricular Fibrillation are examples of this
- Atrial Flutter is when reentry is in the atrium, atrium is always depolarizing, if ventricle isn't refractory it contracts.
- You'll see a bunch of P waves for this.
- Ventricullar Fibrillation is worse, when ventricles are fibrillated, blood isn't ejected. If you stay like this, you'll die.
- No discrete P waves, EKG looks chaotic |
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Term
What class 1 drugs block Na+ channels? |
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Definition
Procainamide, Lidocaine, and Flecainide |
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Term
What are the details on the subclass 1A drugs? |
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Definition
- Procainamide
- Absorbed in GI
- Given orally or parentally
- T 1/2 is 3-4 hours
- Indication is atrial and ventricular arrhythmias
- Bind when the VGC are in the open and inactive state, keeping sodium from entering the cell and causing AP's
- In order of affinity for depolarized, refractory cells, it goes PLF. Otherwise, they're the same
- Decrease automaticity by decreasing phase 4 depolarization and increasing TP.
- Decrease late afterpolarizations
- Solves re-entry, the two ways to solve re-entry are to increase conduction velocity or decrease conduction velocity, these do the latter |
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Term
Class 1 subgroups and their K+ effects |
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Definition
A - Decreases K+ current, slows repolarization, increases AP duration
B - No effect, Na+ blockade accelerates repolarization, decreases AP duration
C - Decreases K+ current, slows repolarization a bit, Na+ blockade accelerates repolarization, no net effect on AP duration. |
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Term
Implications of a changed AP duration |
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Definition
- Increasing AP duration may prevent EARLY afterdepolarizations
- Increasing AP duration may prevent re-entry by prolonging refractory period. |
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Term
Adverse Effects of Class 1 drugs |
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Definition
1A - Precipitation of certain types of arrhythmias (same effect with other drugs), prolonging AP may cause EARLY afterdepolarizations
1B - Paresthesia (peripheral or CNS effect), Tremor (CNS), Nausea of central origin (CNS), Convulsions (CNS), lidocaine is LEAST cardiotoxic
1C - Precipitation of certain types of arrhythmias. Extension of therapeutic effects where decreased conduction leads to heart block, this may also cause re-entry circuits that were previously silent b/c re-entry tried to occur before when it was in refractory. |
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Term
What are the Class 2 drugs, and their details? |
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Definition
- Absorbed in the GI tract
- T 1/2 3.5-6 hours
- Beta 1 receptor antagonist, blocks these receptors in the heart
- Decreases SA node activity
- Decreases Automaticity
- Effects not well understood, not as effective as other classes
- Causes asystole and cardiac arrest, possibly because of exacerbation of effects in patients with AV node dysfunction or taking other agents (CCB's)
- May exacerbate asthma complications
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Term
What are class 3 drugs and their details? |
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Definition
- Example is amiodarone
- T3/T4 analog
- Absorbed in GI or parentally
- T 1/2 3.5-6 hours
- Indication is serious ventricular tachyarrhythmias
- Shares actions with other antiarrhythmics
- Blocks K+ channels without touching Na+ channels, this prolongs AP, this will also prevent EARLY afterdepolarizations, may also prevent re-entry by prolonging refractory period
Adverse Effects: Bradycardia and heart block, Torsades de Pointes, hypotension, Pulmonary fibrosis, Liver dysfunction, Hyper/Hypothyroidism
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Term
Class 4 drugs, examples, and their details |
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Definition
- Example is Verapamil
- Absorbed in the GI tract
- T 1/2 is 4-6 hours
- Drug of choice in supraventricular tachyarrhythmias (atrial flutter, anything originating in atrium)
- Block L-type Ca+ channels
- Block open and inactive state VGC
- In SA, block Ca+ channel, raises TP
- In contractile cell, during plateau, blocks Ca+ channel, decreases AP duration and conduction
- Slow firing rate, so decreases automaticity
- Doesn't affect Phase IV b/c that has to do with Na+ channels
- Prevents late afterdepolarizations
- Causes bradycardia, hypotension, constipation |
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Term
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Definition
- T 1/2 10 seconds
- Bolus IV administration
- Indication: termination of supraventricular tachyarrhythmias
- Binds to A1, activating Gi and Gq, decreasing cAMP, which decreases Ca+. Increases IP3-DAG, which increases K+ current out of cell
- Efflux of K+ causes cell to repolarize to more negative vale, harder to reach TP
- Decreased Ca+ reduces automaticity and late afterdepolarization
- Reduce conduction velocity, may prevent re-entry
- Net effects SHORTENS AP (not primary therapeutic effect)
- No serious adverse effects
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