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Heart is a hollow, muscular organ responsible for maintainance of blood flow. It accomplishes that function by being able not only to contract, but to do it without the need of any external stimulus- has autorhythmical capacity. Is in the myocardium (it´s middle layer), that are present the specialized cells that control all it´s activities.

Contraction of heart
The heart contracts do to the conductance of action potentials through it´s cells.

Heart cells There are 3 main types of cardiac muscle cells (myocytes), in the heart, which account for it´s function:
 * Atrial and Ventricular: this fibres contract in much the same way as skeletal muscle, except that the duration of contraction is longer;
 * Excitatory/Conducting: fibres with capacity of self excitation and conduction of action potentials throughout the heart.

Channels The conductance of action potentials from cell to cell in the heart, is dependent on the channels present on the surface of the myocytes´membranes. The 3 types of channels present in atrial and ventricular fibres responsible for the spread of the action potentials are:
 * Voltage Dependent Na+ channels (also called fast Na+);
 * Voltage dependent Ca2+ channels (also called slow Ca2+ channels);
 * Voltage dependent K+ channels.

Action Potential Using a ventricular myocyte as base for analysis, what happens is the following:


 * 1) Before any stimulus, resting membrane potential of a cell is -85/-90mv;
 * 2) When there is a stimulus, some Na+ channels are opened, allowing the ion to poor into the cell, leading to the depolarization of the membrane;
 * 3) When depolarization reaches the threshold level, all the fast Na+ channels open, leading to a spike in depolarization;
 * 4) When spike is reached, the fast Na+ channels become innactivated, at the same time that the slow Ca2+ channels and some K+ channels are opened. This means that Ca2+ ions are pooring inside the cell, while K+ ions are leaking from the cell, leading to a plateau phase;
 * 5) After about o.2s, slow Ca2+ channels start to close, while more K+ channels open, leading to a new phase, where more positively charged ions are leaking out of the cell than pooring in, leading the repolarization of the membrane, back to it´s resting potential.

Aditional considerations → Atrial action potentials are faster, lasting only 0.2s because it has less amount of slow Ca2+ channels, leading to an almost absent plateau; → Action potentials in ventricular cells last about 0.3s, 100 times more than a skeletal muscle cell.

Autorhythmicity of Heart
Autorhythmical cells of the heart are composed of cells of Sino-Atrial node, Atrio-Ventricular node, Purkyně fibres. However, in physiological conditions, the SA node is the one that sets the pace for the rest of the heart- is the Pacemaker, discharging at a rate of 70/80bpm. The excitatory/conducting cells of the heart are the fibres responsible for the autorhthmicity of the heart.

Channels
 * ‘’Funny‘’ channels (small Na+ leaky channels);
 * Voltage dependent Ca2+ channels (also called slow Ca2+ channels);
 * Voltage dependent K+ channels.

Pace Maker Action Potential Using SA node fibre as base for analysis, what happens is the following:


 * 1) Resting membrane potential is -55/-60mv;
 * 2) The funny Na+ channels are open, allowing the ion to constantly poor into the cell, slowly depolarization the membrane;
 * 3) When threshold is reached, slow Ca2+ channels are open, causing the action potential;
 * 4) About 0.1-0.15s after, the slow Ca2+ channels become inactivated, and K+ channels are opened;
 * 5) Ouflux of K+ ions, and low permeability of the membrane to the Na+ ions, allows repolarization, ending the action potential.
 * 6) Then, K+ channels begin to close, and more funny channels open, causing positive drift of membrane potential upward once more, giving rise to new action potential (phenomenon is cyclical).

Aditional considerations