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action potential |
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potential /po·ten·tial/ (po-ten´shal) 1. existing and ready for action, but not active. 2. the work per unit charge necessary to move a charged body in an electric field from a reference point to another point, measured in volts. action potential (AP) the electrical activity developed in a muscle or nerve cell during activity. after-potential afterpotential. electric potential , electrical potential potential (2). evoked potential (EP) the electrical signal recorded from a sensory receptor, nerve, muscle, or area of the central nervous system that has been stimulated, usually by electricity. membrane potential the electric potential existing on the two sides of a membrane or across the cell wall. resting potential the potential difference across the membrane of a normal cell at rest. spike potential the initial, very large change in potential of an excitable cell membrane during excitation.
action potential, an electric impulse consisting of a self-propagating series of polarizations and depolarizations, transmitted across the plasma membranes of a nerve fiber during the transmission of a nerve impulse and across the plasma membranes of a muscle cell during contraction or another activity. In the absence of an impulse, the inside is electrically negative and the outside is positive (the resting potential). During the passage of an impulse at any point on the nerve fiber, the inside becomes positive and the outside, negative. Also called action current. action potential, n 1. an electric impulse consisting of a self-propagating series of polarizations and depolarizations, transmitted across the cell membranes of a nerve fiber during the transmission of a nerve impulse and across the cell membranes of a muscle cell during contraction. n 2. the electrical potential developed in a muscle or nerve during activity. action potential the nerve impulse, the sign of activity and the basis of activity in individual neurons in the nervous system. The measure of the activity of an individual nerve cell is indicated by the frequency of its discharge. compound action potential the sum of the activity in a number of nerve fibers. It applies to the degree of activity in a nerve trunk in which a variable proportion of nerve fibers are discharging. action potential Cardiology The constellation of changes in electric potential generated by myocardial cell membranes after stimulation Physiology The sequential, electrochemical polarization and depolarization that traverses the membrane of
a neuron in response to mechanical stimulation–eg, touch, pain, cold, etc. See Depolarization. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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