Publication | Closed Access
Intracellular and external recording from frog ventricular fibers during hypertonic perfusion
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1960
Year
Cardiac MuscleSynaptic TransmissionBiomedical EngineeringSensory SystemsCellular PhysiologySocial SciencesFrog Ventricular FibersBlood FlowIntegrative PhysiologyElectrophysiological EvaluationHyperpolarization (Biology)CardiologyBlood Flow MeasurementBiophysicsCardiac MechanicMechanobiologyMolecular PhysiologyHypertonic SolutionsFrog HeartsIon ChannelsHypertonic PerfusionNeurophysiologyPhysiologyExternal RecordingElectrophysiologyCardiovascular PhysiologyBrain ElectrophysiologyAction PotentialsMedicine
Isolated frog hearts perfused with hypertonic solutions passed through three reversible stages: I) altered spontaneous waveforms; II) absence of spontaneous activity but responsive to stimulation; III) nonresponsive. The following patterns of action potentials were observed with intracellular recording during stage I: 1) the plateaus gradually disappeared leaving short-duration spikes. 2) These spikes often occurred as high-frequency bursts usually accompanied by sustained contractions. Quiescent cells were often located adjacent to active ones, and many fibers fired at frequencies lower than that of the ECG. 3) Often a ‘slow wave’ gradually differentiated from the plateau and resulted in separation of a fast initial spike from a later slow wave. These observations suggest fiber-to-fiber junctional transmission rather than conduction within a syncytium. Hypertonic solutions may: a) depress fiber-to-fiber transmission, b) alter the time courses of the Na and K conductances and c) directly depress the contractile mechanism.