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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Vagal and sympathetic effects on the pacemaker fibers in the sinus venosus of the heart

Otto F. Hutter, +1 more
- 20 May 1956 - 
- Vol. 39, Iss: 5, pp 715-733
TLDR
It is proposed that the fibers showing the largest fall in membrane potential during diastole are the pacemaker fibers of the heart, and that the rest of the preparation is excited by conduction.
Abstract
1. Action potentials from sinus venosus and auricle fibers of spontaneously beating frog hearts have been recorded with intracellular electrodes. 2. Sinus fibers show a slow depolarization, the pacemaker potential, during diastole. The amplitude of this potential varies in different parts of the sinus. In some fibers the membrane potential falls by 11 to 15 mv. during diastole and the transition to the upstroke of the action potential is comparatively gradual. In other regions the depolarization develops more slowly and the action potential takes off more abruptly from a higher membrane potential. It is proposed that the fibers showing the largest fall in membrane potential during diastole are the pacemaker fibers of the heart, and that the rest of the preparation is excited by conduction. In auricle fibers the membrane potential is constant during diastole. 3. The maximum diastolic membrane potential and the overshoot of the action potential vary inversely with the amplitude of the pacemaker potential. The highest values were measured in auricle fibers. 4. Stimulation of vagi suppresses the pacemaker potentials. While the heart is arrested the membrane potential of the sinus fibers rises to a level above the maximum diastolic value reached in previous beats. In 28 experiments vagal stimulation increased the membrane potential from an average maximal diastolic value of 55 mv. to a "resting" level of 65.4 mv. The biggest vagal polarization was 23 mv. 5. In contrast to the sinus fibers vagal inhibition does not change the diastolic membrane potential of frog auricle fibers. 6. Vagal stimulation greatly accelerates the repolarization of the action potential and reduces its amplitude. These changes were seen both in the sinus and in auricle fibers stimulated by direct shocks during vagal arrest. 7. The conduction velocity in the sinus venosus of the tortoise is reduced by vagal stimulation. Block of conduction often occurs. 8. In the frog sinus venosus sympathetic stimulation increases the rate of rise of the pacemaker potential, accelerating the beat. The threshold remains unchanged. The rate of rise of the upstroke and the amplitude of the overshoot are increased. 9. The analogies between the vagal inhibition of the heart and the nervous inhibition of other preparations are discussed.

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Citations
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Inwardly Rectifying Potassium Channels: Their Structure, Function, and Physiological Roles

TL;DR: The crystal structure of different Kir channels is opening the way to understanding the structure-function relationships of this simple but diverse ion channel family.
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Pacemaker Mechanisms in Cardiac Tissue

TL;DR: The heartbeat is a sign of life, and not surprisingly it has attracted much interest and curiosity since the early stages of scientific investigation, but a search for the basis of spontaneous cardiac activity could only be undertaken several centuries after primitive observations with the development of techniques that allowed the study of the electrical properties of excitable tissues.
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The Peripheral Nervous System

TL;DR: This chapter discusses Neuromuscular Transmission-The Transmitter-Receptor Combination, which focuses on the role of the Nerve Impulse in the synthesis, storage, and release of Acetylcholine.
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Genesis and Regulation of the Heart Automaticity

TL;DR: Evidence on the functional role of different families of ion channels in cardiac pacemaking is discussed and recent results obtained on genetically engineered mouse strains displaying dysfunction in heart automaticity are reviewed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An analysis of the end‐plate potential recorded with an intra‐cellular electrode

P. Fatt, +1 more
TL;DR: The immediate concern of the present work is to determine the electric charge which passes through the end-plate membrane during the transmission of one impulse and to throw some light on the mechanism by which the transfer of ions across theend-plate is brought about.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of the cardiac membrane potential on the rapid availability of the sodium-carrying system

TL;DR: The present experiments were undertaken in order to look for a similar effect in mammalian Purkinje fibres by means of a feedback circuit the 'resting' potential could be chosen at will; its effect was observed on certain features of the action potential which are thought to be indicative of the sodium permeability, namely the upstroke velocity and the size of the 'overshoot'.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of current flow on the membrane potential of cardiac muscle.

TL;DR: An account of experiments designed to investigate the cardiac action potential by applying suitable pulses of current at various stages in the cardiac cycle is contained.
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