Drugs Influencing Heart Rate and Arrythmias Flashcards

1
Q

What are the targets of parasympathetic control of the heart?

A

SA node and AV node

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2
Q

What is the neurotransmitter used in parasympathetic control of the heart?

A

Acetylcholine

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3
Q

What is the receptor used in parasympathetic control of the heart?

A

muscarinic receptors

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4
Q

What is the response of parasympathetic control of the heart?

A

slower heart rate

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5
Q

Which has more influence over the heart at rest - the parasympathetic or sympathetic nervous system?

A

The parasympathetic

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6
Q

What are the targets of sympathetic control of the heart?

A

SA node, conducting tissue and myocardial cells

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7
Q

What are the neurotransmitters used in sympathetic control of the heart?

A

noradrenaline and circulating adrenaline

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8
Q

What are the receptors in sympathetic control of the heart?

A

beta-adrenoceptors

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9
Q

What is the response of sympathetic control of the heart?

A

increased heart rate and increased contractility

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10
Q

What are the phases of the SA node action potential?

A
  • phase 0: upstroke - depolarisation caused by calcium coming in
    • phase 3: downstroke - repolarisation caused by potassium going out
    • phase 4: spontaneous depolarisation caused by leaky sodium channels
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11
Q

What is the resting membrane potential of the SA node?

A

unstable -60mV to +20mV

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12
Q

How does parasympathetic activity influence SA node cells?

A

acetylcholine acts on M2 muscarinic receptors to decrease the levels of cAMP and open potassium channels - this leads to a longer repolarisation phase so it slows sodium and calcium channels so it takes longer to reach potential at the SA node and slows conduction at the AV node

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13
Q

How does sympathetic activity influence SA node cells?

A

noradrenaline acts on beta1 adrenoceptors to increase levels of cAMP and open calcium channels - this leads to a quicker upstroke (phase 4), increased rate of firing at the SA node and increased conduction at the AV node

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14
Q

What are the phases of the ventricular action potential?

A

phase 0: depolarisation due to sodium entry, phase 1: rapid repolarisation because potassium floods out, phase 2: plateau due to calcium going in and potassium going out, phase 3: repolarisation due to potassium going out, phase 4: stable membrane potential (no leaky sodium channels)

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15
Q

What is the resting membrane potential of ventricular cells?

A

-90mV

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16
Q

What are the 3 different mechanisms underlying dysrhythmias?

A

altered impulse formation, altered impuslse conduction (block or re-entry) or triggered entry (early or late after depolarisations)

17
Q

What is altered impulse formation?

A

Where there is an abnormal generation of action potentials at a site other than the SA node

18
Q

What is a conduction block?

A

Where the action potential can’t be conducted through the AV node so the ventricles adopt their own slowed rate

19
Q

What is re-entry?

A

Where a loop of conduction fibres causes extra beats to be generated and the rate increases

20
Q

Liv- I accidently lost this question. Can you re-do it?

A

An abnormal action potential before normal repolarisation is completed - due either to increased calcium channel activity or by NA activity

21
Q

What is late after depolarisation?

A

An abnormal action potential after repolarisation is completed but before another action potential would normally occur

22
Q

What are the four major classes of antidysrhythmics?

A

sodium channel blockers, beta-adrenoceptor antagonists, potassium channel blockers, calcium channel blockers

23
Q

What is the action of sodium channel blockers?

A

To reduce the phase 0 slope of ventricular action potentials

24
Q

What are the 3 different types of sodium channel blockers?

A

Type 1a - moderate block, type 1b - weak block, type 1c - strong block

25
Q

What is quinidine?

A

A type 1a moderate sodium channel blocker that also prolongs repolarisation

26
Q

What is lignocaine?

A

A type 1b mild sodium channel blocker that also shortens repolarisation

27
Q

What is flecainide?

A

A type 1c strong sodium channel blocker that has no effect on repolarisation

28
Q

What are the side effects of sodium channel blockers?

A

Initially causes lip and tongue numbness - shows that the drug is at an effective concentration but then quickly progresses to respiratory arrest and cardiovascular depression - narrow range of concentrations it can be used over

29
Q

What is the action of beta-adrenoceptor antagonists?

A

Inhibits sympathetic influence on SA nodes and AV nodes - but also has membrane stabilising effects in purkinje fibres

30
Q

What are the adverse effects of beta-adrenoceptor antagonists?

A

bradycardia, hypotension, AV conduction block, bronchoconstriction, hypoglycaemia

31
Q

What is the action of potassium channel inhibitors?

A

slows phase 3 repolarisation to prolong cardiac action potentials

32
Q

When are potassium channel inhibitors used?

A

for re-entry type arrythmias

33
Q

What is amiodarone?

A

a potassium channel inhibitor that also blocks sodium and calcium channels and beta-adrenoceptors

34
Q

What is the action of calcium channel inhibitors?

A

slows conduction velocity and increases refractory period - acts preferentially on SA and AV nodal tissue