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Cardiac Muscle Prof. K. Sivapalan.

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1 Cardiac Muscle Prof. K. Sivapalan

2 Properties of cardiac muscle.
Branching cells with central nucleous. Separated by intercalated discs – tight junctions with pores permeable to ions. [electrical continuity] Functional syncytium. Striations – similar to skeletal muscles. June 2013 Cardiac muscle

3 Electrical properties of cardiac muscle.
Resting membrane potential – 85 – 95 mV. Depolarized to +20 mV. Rising phase – 2 m sec. Plateau – sec in atrium and 0.3 in ventricles. Refractory period – sec. June 2013 Cardiac muscle

4 Ionic basis of action potential.
Depolarization – sodium influx. Plateau – calcium influx and potassium efflux. Repolarization – potassium efflux. Na+. Ca++ K+. June 2013 Cardiac muscle

5 Sarcomere, filaments and fibrils.
Z lines – center of actin filaments. M line – center of myosin filaments. A band – length of myosin filaments. Sarcomere is a unit of myofibrils between two Z lines. June 2013 Cardiac muscle

6 Myofibrils and T tubular system.
Myofibrils - bundle of actin + myosin [Yellow] Mitochondria [blue]. Sarcoplasmic reticulum + T tubules [pink] at Z line. Intercalated discs at Z line [light blue]. Central nucleus [purple]. June 2013 Cardiac muscle

7 Excitation contraction coupling.
Action potential spreads across intercalated discs. Spreads along T tubules [Z line] to Terminal cistern. Calcium released from cistern and influx from ECF. Actin myosin binding and sliding. Removal of Calcium results in relaxation. June 2013 Cardiac muscle

8 Non-tetanization The muscle twitch lasts for about 300 ms.
The refractory period extends until more than half of the relaxation period June 2013 Cardiac muscle

9 Initial Length and Force
Initial length is proportional to the force of contraction Starling’s law Excessive stretch- reduction of force [as in skeletal muscle] June 2013 Cardiac muscle

10 Conducting system. SA node. Inter nodal pathways & atrial musculature.
AV node. Bundle of His. Bundle branches – Purkinje fibers. Cardiac muscles through intercalated discs. June 2013 Cardiac muscle

11 Properties of Conducting System
Pacemaker – junctional tissue. Pacemaker potential – after each impulse declines to firing level. Rate of action potential depends on the slope of the prepotential. It is due to reduction of K+ efflux (↑ by Ach) and then increase in Ca++ influx (↑ by NA). Ca++ T (transient) channels complete prepotential and L (long lasting) action potentials [no sodium] in nodal tissues. SA node – 120/min, AV node – 45/min, Purkinje system – 35/min. First area to reach threshold will be the pace maker. Properties of Conducting System June 2013 Cardiac muscle

12 Innervation No motor end plates- nerves end in varicosities
Sympathetics innervate the nodes and myocardium [noradrenaline] 10th cranial nerve, vagus, innervates SA and AV nodes of the heart [acetyl choline]. Stimulation causes chronotropic and ionotropic effects. June 2013 Cardiac muscle


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