To read this article with accompanying illustrations, as well as all the articles in the series, you can go to the mini-site: "Aging of Your Heart and Blood Vessels is Risky" by clicking here.
Introduction
You're watching an episode of ER. Suddenly one of the actors yells,
"CODE BLUE", meaning in this case that a patient's heart has
stopped beating. The ER staff runs for emergency equipment. Two
paddles are whipped from a red cart; they are applied to the
unfortunate person's chest. A doctor shouts, "stand back", and the
patient is given an electric shock through his chest wall. The
patient's heart is restarted!
Sounds electrifying, doesn't it? You sure wouldn't want that to
happen to you! Well guess what? It is happening to you with every
beat of your heart. Every one of your heartbeats starts with an electrical impulse along the
membrane (or outer skin) of all the individual cells, which make up the heart. So, in essence
this scene from ER is played out in your heart on a cellular level millions of times throughout
your lifetime.
The heart ...an excitable organ
Previously we learned that the heart cells within the wall of the ventricle must
"relax" between heart beats, so that the pressure inside the ventricle can
decrease and allow it to fill with blood. This blood is then pumped out with
the next heartbeat. This sixth article in our series explains to you how
exquisitely timed electrical impulses that shock your heart cells are
responsible for this ability of the heart to contract and relax, and how this
process changes with aging.
Unlike the ER situation described above, normally, it is not necessary for us to
supply an electrical shock to our chests to excite our heart cells. Our hearts
have an internal clock or pacemaker mechanism to repeatedly send an
electrical signal to shock each cell, by causing an "action potential" to occur.
An action potential is a transient alteration in electrical charge along a heart
muscle cell membrane. It is one of several steps leading to the cell's contraction. Following this
shock or action potential, Calcium, the "actor" who plays the staring role in the drama of the
heartbeat, comes onstage.
Introducing calcium in the staring role
Most of us are familiar with the element, Calcium. In its mineralized form (hard form)
calcium is what makes our teeth and bones strong. In the heart's cells calcium
appears in its soft form, meaning that it is dissolved in liquid or bound to various
proteins. Because it is in dissolved form it is able to move freely through microscopic
channels (holes that open and close repetitively) in the cell membranes (or "skins")
of the heart's cells.
The myocyte or muscle cell
Lets look at a single cardiac muscle cell, called a myocyte, to see how this works. Think of a
myocyte as a porous elastic-like balloon. A membrane, or outer skin, surrounds the myocyte.
Inside, the myocyte is filled with fluid and proteins, and it contains structures (or organelles),
one of which is called the sarcoplasmic reticulum.
This organelle (a small "organ" within a cell) functions as a storage bin for
calcium. As we said, the outer membrane of the myocyte is not watertight at
all times. It has tiny openings, called channels, which open and close in
response to a stimulus, namely, a change in electrical charge across the cell
membrane during the action potential. Calcium enters and leaves the
myocyte through these tiny calcium-channels. It's similar to flipping an
electrical switch to open a door. An electrical wave spreads from your heart's
pacemaker (a group of specialized cells that start the electrical impulse) to
the heart's ventricular wall. This produces an action potential that results in
a change in the electrical charge. Essentially, this "flips the switch" on the
membrane of the myocyte, to open these calcium-channels (doors). The open
channels then allow the movement of a small amount of calcium to enter the cell. This calcium
then binds to another calcium channel on the sarcoplasmic reticulum, the storage bin for
calcium. This causes it to release a large amount of calcium within the cell. The increased
calcium flows into the vicinity of the cell's myofilaments or the "contractile machinery" of the
heart muscle. The calcium bound to the myofilaments causes them to shorten (or tighten).
Because these myofilaments are connected to the surface of the cell their shortening causes
the heart cell to shorten (shrink its length and fatten its width). This process occurs nearly
simultaneously among all the cells in the heart wall, causing the entire heart wall to squeeze
the blood within it, and to eject blood. Thus, the heartbeat is the cumulative effect of all the
cells making up the heart muscle contracting in unison.
Then, the scene plays in rewind and the reverse takes place. Calcium disengages from the
myofilaments. A special "calcium pump" pumps most of it back into the storage bin, and some
is extruded, or forced from the cell through specialized calcium exit-channels in the cell
membrane. The show is over for now." Elvis has left the building!" The environment becomes
calmer. Similarly, this decrease in calcium around the contractile filaments of the cell permits
them to relax and thus causes the cell to lengthen.
The essence of a heartbeat
From what you have learned about how the heart cell, or myocyte, works you now know that the
essence of a heartbeat is a change in the calcium level within your heart cells. When the heart
completes its filling period the calcium dissolved in the fluid inside the cell and surrounding the
contractile filaments is very low, at least 10,000 times lower than the calcium levels in your
blood and in the other fluids between your cells, called the intercellular spaces. "The Director of
the heartbeat" (or pacemaker) gives the signal to increase the calcium level around the
contractile machinery (myofilaments). At this point the stage hands (positive and negative
charges) on both sides of the cell membrane are called upon to set up the scene and the
Director calls for "ACTION". This mechanism is thus called "the action potential". This action or
change in electrical charge on the myocytes' membranes, called depolarization, starts the scene
by opening the small channels on the cells membrane and letting some calcium enter the cell.
Then the process of contraction and relaxation of the heart cells occurs. Our director, the
pacemaker, is not satisfied with just one take. The pacemaker calls for a retake of this same
scene over and over. The result is an Oscar-winning and long-standing production called "The
Beating Heart". We'll learn more about this famous Director, Pacemaker, in a future article. If
this system fails for some reason, and the temporary increase in calcium inside the cell doesn't
happen, the next heartbeat doesn't occur and you experience a skipped heartbeat. (We will also
discuss this in a future article.) If the system fails altogether and does not generate another
electrical impulse, this can lead to a scene similar to the emergency room situation in the
Introduction to this article.
The calcium pump becomes less efficient with aging
From our individual experiences we know the strength of the heartbeat can vary from a given
situation to the next. For example, during vigorous exercise our body's cells need extra oxygen.
In order to supply this extra oxygen the volume of blood pumped during each beat must
increase. To pump more blood heart rate increases and the strength of the heartbeat increases.
Article How Good a Pump is Your Older Heart?. From what we have learned so far about our
lead actor, Calcium, it is easy to see that heart cells are able to increase the strength of their
contraction by increasing the amount of calcium released from their intracellular calcium storage
bins during beats. In other words, the amplitude (or range of size) of the calcium oscillation
(flow) that drives the contractile machinery (myofilaments) varies with the amount of calcium
delivered to the contractile protein inside the heart cell. But, this mechanism is obviously
dependent upon how much calcium can be released from these storage bins. And further, how
much can be released is determined by how much is pumped in during the period between
heartbeats. These calcium pumps generally work very efficiently in the young heart, but this
changes as the heart ages.
Lets compare the calcium storage bin pump to a factory with machinery that uses a new
millennium fuel, called "CalCoal". This fuel doesn't burn up, but instead, recycles. Electrical
release channel switches are flipped when the machines need fuel. Fuel then flows from storage
bins to the machinery and then back to the same bins to wait for the next signal to repeat the
action. During periods when the fuel has to be cycled faster, the pumps and switches cycle the
fuel at a faster rate. All goes well when the electrical switches and pumps are working
efficiently. But, consider this! The pumps and switches used in this factory are from when it
was originally built in the thirties. Some of these older pumps stopped working and were
removed. The management chose not to replace them. When the switches are flipped on, the
machinery is delivered a lot less fuel than if all pumps were in operation, particularly when the
rate of cycling must increase. Just like the machinery at the factory needs the right number and
efficiently working switches and pumps, the heart cells need a certain number of operating
calcium pumps and efficient switches (signals) to push calcium back into its storage bin (the
sarcoplasmic reticulum) and have fuel ready for the next signal (electrical impulse) to start
another heart contraction. Obviously, the amount of calcium that can be released from the
storage area is dependent on how much can be pumped in and stored there in the first place. If
the pump isn't working, the bin will not fill with calcium and calcium will not be available for the
next release signal, particularly at higher cycling rates or during exercise. With aging, and with
many types of cardiac diseases that lead to heart failure, these calcium pumps fail. Like our
factory problem there are two similar reasons for this. One, the number of pumps decreases,
because fewer pumps are produced within the cell. This is because the genes that make this
pump protein become partially silenced with advancing age. Because there are fewer pumps,
the second reason the calcium pumps falter is that the collective maximum pumping capacity of
all the storage bins, which is regulated via brain-heart communication (or switches) is reduced
with aging. (We will learn more about this brain-heart communication in a future article.) These
two deficits cause the maximum amount of calcium that can be released by the intracellular or
Ca2+ storage site to decline particularly during exercise. The end result is a decrease in the
maximum strength of the heartbeat, during vigorous exercise, with aging. This reduced overall
calcium pumping function also results in a prolonged time for cell calcium to return to its
resting level, and a prolonged contraction or delayed relaxation of the heart's cells, essentially
a delay in the heart's ability to relax. This makes it more difficult for the heart to fill with blood
during the diastolic period and prepare for the next heartbeat. See Article The Older Heart Has
Trouble Pumping Blood During ExerciseThis impaired relaxation on a cellular level reduces the
ability of the older heart to fill during the period between heartbeats, and thus plays a role in
causing shortness of breath in older persons during vigorous exercise. As discussed in Article Your Older Heart May Cause You to Feel Short of Breath.
Dr. Ed is a physician/scientist, who is internationally recognized for studies that range from humans to
molecules on how the heart and blood vessels work in health and disease as the body ages.
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