Neurophysiology Revision Flashcards

1
Q

What is the resting potential of a neuron?

A
  • 70mV
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2
Q

What is the activation potential of a neuron?

A
  • 55mV
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3
Q

At what potential do Na+ channels become refractory?

A

+40mV

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4
Q

What causes repolarisation?

A

Na+ channels becoming refractory and K+ continuing to leave the cell

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5
Q

What causes the absolute refractory peroid?

A

Inactivation gating - not the same as the resting state of the Na+ channel

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6
Q

What is the purpose of nodes of Ranvier?

A

Allows for an increase in speed of conduction - where action potentials take place

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7
Q

What are “SNAREs”?

A

Pairs of molecules on a vesicle which allow it to dock at a target

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8
Q

What does clostridium botulinum target?

A

The SNARE system (inactivates it)

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9
Q

How are neurotransmitters inactivated?

A
  • Diffusion
  • Re-uptake
  • Enzymal inactivation
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10
Q

What are the 2 types of receptors neurotransmitters attach to?

A
  • Ionotropic (directly gate ion flow)

- Metabotropic (indirectly gate ion flow or activate other pathways)

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11
Q

How do you measure nerve conduction?

A

Not the size of action potential rather the sum of all the action potentials in a nerve or the resulting stimulus inside a target such as a skeletal muscle

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12
Q

What do less axons lead to?

A

Reduced amplitude

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13
Q

What is slowed conduction velocity due to?

A

Less myelin

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14
Q

What is carpal tunnel syndrome due to?

A

Median nerve being compressed at the wrist by transverse carpal ligament. Decreases function of axons not myelination

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15
Q

Name an autoimmune channelopathy

A
  • Myasthenia Gravis
  • Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome
  • Limbic encephalitis
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16
Q

What is the normal speed of conduction along the axon?

A

50 m/s

17
Q

What does myasthenia gravis affect?

A

Neuromuscular nicotinic Ach receptor