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Afterhyperpolarization, or AHP, is the hyperpolarizing phase of a neuron's action potential where the cell's membrane potential falls below the normal resting potential. This is also commonly referred to as an action potential's undershoot phase. AHPs have been segregated into "fast", "medium", and "slow" components that appear to have distinct ...
Slow afterhyperpolarisation (sAHP) refers to prolonged periods of hyperpolarisation in a neuron or cardiomyocyte following an action potential or other depolarising event. In neurons, trains of action potentials may be required to induce sAHPs; this is unlike fast AHPs that require no more than a single action potential.
The undershoot, or afterhyperpolarization, phase is the period during which the membrane potential temporarily becomes more negatively charged than when at rest (hyperpolarized). Finally, the time during which a subsequent action potential is impossible or difficult to fire is called the refractory period , which may overlap with the other phases.
Diagram of membrane potential changes during an action potential. Hyperpolarization is a change in a cell's membrane potential that makes it more negative. Cells typically have a negative resting potential, with neuronal action potentials depolarizing the membrane.
Their activation limits the firing frequency of action potentials and is important for regulating afterhyperpolarization in the neurons of the central nervous system as well as many other types of electrically excitable cells. This is accomplished through the hyperpolarizing leak of positively charged potassium ions along their concentration ...
Action potentials in vertebrate neurons are followed by an afterhyperpolarization (AHP) that may persist for several seconds and may have profound consequences for the firing pattern of the neuron. Each component of the AHP is kinetically distinct and is mediated by different calcium-activated potassium channels.
Afterhyperpolarization; Amperometry; Amplitude integrated electroencephalography; ANNINE-6plus; Anode break excitation; Charles Antzelevitch; ArcLight (biology) Artificial cerebrospinal fluid; Automated patch clamp
Slow afterhyperpolarization; Solitary tract; Spectro-temporal receptive field; Spike sorting; Startle-evoked movement; Stereopsis recovery; Stimulus (physiology) Stretchable microelectrode array; Subthreshold membrane potential oscillations; Sucrose gap; Summation (neurophysiology) Synaptic fatigue; Synaptic gating; Synaptic vesicle ...