Molecular Physiology of Cardiac Repolarization
Washington University in St. Louis
Abstract
The heart is a rhythmic electromechanical pump, the functioning of which depends on action potential generation and propagation, followed by relaxation and a period of refractoriness until the next impulse is generated. Myocardial action potentials reflect the sequential activation and inactivation of inward (Na(+) and Ca(2+)) and outward (K(+)) current carrying ion channels. In different regions of the heart, action potential waveforms are distinct, owing to differences in Na(+), Ca(2+), and K(+) channel expression, and these differences contribute to the normal, unidirectional propagation of activity and to the generation of normal cardiac rhythms. Changes in channel functioning, resulting from inherited or…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 24.38
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 614
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Cardiac action potential
- Repolarization
- Ion channel
- Electrophysiology
- Refractory period
- Biology
- Chemistry
- Cell biology