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Sinoatrial node



SinoAtrial or (el) node
Interior of right side of heart. (SA node not labeled, but region visible at left, near crista terminalis.
Schematic representation of the atrioventricular bundle of His.
Latin nodus sinuatrialis
Artery sinuatrial nodal artery
MeSH Sinoatrial+Node
Dorlands/Elsevier n_09/12577255

The sinoAtrial node (abbreviated SA node or SAN, also called the sinus node) is the impulse generating (pacemaker) tissue located in the right atrium of the heart, and thus the generator of sinus rhythm. It is a group of cells positioned on the wall of the right atrium, near the entrance of the superior vena cava. These cells are modified cardiac myocytes. Though they possess some contractile filaments, they do not contract.

Contents

Role as a pacemaker

Although all of the heart's cells possess the ability to generate the electrical impulses (or action potentials) that trigger cardiac contraction, the sinoatrial node is what normally initiates it, simply because it generates impulses slightly faster than the other areas with pacemaker potential. Because cardiac myocytes, like all muscle cells, have refractory periods following contraction during which additional contractions cannot be triggered, their pacemaker potential is overridden by the sinoatrial node.

Cells in the SA node will naturally discharge (create action potentials) at about 60-100 times/minute.[1] Because the sinoatrial node is responsible for the rest of the heart's electrical activity, it is sometimes called the primary pacemaker.

If the SA node does not function, or the impulse generated in the SA node is blocked before it travels down the electrical conduction system, a group of cells further down the heart will become the heart's pacemaker. These cells form the atrioventricular node (AV node), which is an area between the atria and ventricles, within the atrial septum.

Innervation

The SA node is richly innervated by parasympathetic nervous system fibers (CN X: Vagus Nerve) and by sympathetic nervous system fibers (T1-4, Spinal Nerves). This makes the SA node susceptible to autonomic influences.

  • Stimulation of the vagus nerve (parasympathetic fibers) causes a decrease in the SA node rate (thereby decreasing the heart rate and force of contraction).
  • Stimulation via sympathetic fibers causes an increase in the SA node rate (thereby increasing the heart rate and force of contraction).

Blood supply

In the majority of patients, the SA node receives blood from the right coronary artery, meaning that a myocardial infarction occluding it will cause ischaemia in the SA node unless there is a sufficiently good anastomosis from the left coronary artery. If not, death of the affected cells will stop the SA node from triggering the heartbeat.

See also

References

  1. ^ http://sprojects.mmi.mcgill.ca/cardiophysio/AnatomySAnode.htm
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sinoatrial_node". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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