Your heart is more than a muscle — it’s an electrical organ. It beats not because nerves tell it to, but because it has its own pacemaker system — a built-in generator and wiring network that keeps every contraction perfectly timed. In other words, your heart has auto Wi-Fi — no external connection needed.
🧠 Automaticity — The Heart’s Unique Gift
Unlike skeletal muscle, the cardiac muscle has autorhythmic cells that can spontaneously generate electrical impulses. This property is called automaticity, and it’s the reason your heart can beat even when removed from the body (for a while). These specialized cells are part of the cardiac conduction system.
🧩 Components of the Cardiac Conduction System
| Structure | Location | Function | Intrinsic Rate (beats/min) |
|---|---|---|---|
| SA node (Sinoatrial node) | Right atrium near SVC | Pacemaker of the heart; initiates impulses | 60–100 |
| AV node (Atrioventricular node) | Interatrial septum near tricuspid valve | Delays impulse to allow ventricular filling | 40–60 |
| Bundle of His (AV bundle) | Upper interventricular septum | Conducts impulse from atria to ventricles | 40–60 |
| Right and Left Bundle Branches | Interventricular septum | Carry impulse to ventricles | 20–40 |
| Purkinje fibers | Ventricular walls | Rapid conduction for coordinated contraction | 20–40 |
⚙️ Step-by-Step Electrical Journey
- SA Node — The Pacemaker
Located in the right atrium (near SVC opening). Generates spontaneous action potentials (due to slow Na⁺ influx via “funny currents”). Sets the rhythm for the entire heart.
Note: SA node fires faster than all other areas, so it dominates — the “pacemaker supremacy.” - Atrial Conduction
Impulse spreads across both atria via internodal pathways. Causes atrial depolarization, leading to atrial contraction (represented by the P wave on ECG). - AV Node — The Delay Station
Located in the interatrial septum near the tricuspid valve. Delays impulse for ~0.1 sec — allows ventricles to fill before contracting. Then transmits the signal to the Bundle of His.Clinical pearl: AV nodal delay is crucial — without it, atria and ventricles would contract simultaneously, drastically reducing efficiency. - Bundle of His and Bundle Branches
The only electrical link between atria and ventricles (fibrous skeleton prevents direct conduction). Bundle of His divides into right and left bundle branches, carrying impulses down the interventricular septum.Clinical link: Blockage of a branch → bundle branch block (BBB) → widened QRS on ECG. - Purkinje Fibers — The Final Conductors
Fine fibers spreading through ventricular walls. Conduct impulses very rapidly → ensure simultaneous contraction of both ventricles (efficient ejection of blood).
Speed comparison: Purkinje fibers conduct at ~4 m/s (fastest in the heart).
💓 Action Potential in Cardiac Muscle
Cardiac electrical activity is based on action potentials — brief changes in membrane potential that trigger contraction. There are two main types of cardiac action potentials:
A. Pacemaker (Nodal) Action Potential — SA & AV Nodes
| Phase | Event | Ion Movement |
|---|---|---|
| Phase 4 (spontaneous depolarization) | Slow Na⁺ influx via “funny” channels | Na⁺ in |
| Phase 0 (depolarization) | Threshold reached → Ca²⁺ channels open | Ca²⁺ in |
| Phase 3 (repolarization) | K⁺ efflux | K⁺ out |
B. Fast Response (Non-pacemaker) Action Potential — Atrial & Ventricular Muscle, Purkinje Fibers
| Phase | Event | Ion Movement |
|---|---|---|
| Phase 0 | Rapid depolarization | Na⁺ in |
| Phase 1 | Partial repolarization | K⁺ out |
| Phase 2 | Plateau phase (unique to cardiac muscle) | Ca²⁺ in, K⁺ out |
| Phase 3 | Repolarization | K⁺ out |
| Phase 4 | Resting potential restored | — |
🧩 The Plateau Phase (Phase 2)
Ca²⁺ entry maintains depolarization → allows prolonged contraction. Prevents tetany (sustained contraction) → essential for rhythmic pumping.
⚙️ Excitation-Contraction Coupling
Electrical depolarization (via Ca²⁺ influx) triggers calcium-induced calcium release (CICR) from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. → This rise in cytoplasmic Ca²⁺ activates actin-myosin interaction → contraction. When Ca²⁺ is pumped back into SR, the muscle relaxes.
📈 Electrocardiogram (ECG/EKG)
The ECG is a graphical recording of the heart’s electrical activity from the body surface. Each deflection represents a specific electrical event.
| Wave / Segment | Event |
|---|---|
| P wave | Atrial depolarization |
| PR interval | AV nodal delay |
| QRS complex | Ventricular depolarization |
| T wave | Ventricular repolarization |
| ST segment | Plateau phase of ventricular action potential |
⚖️ Autonomic Control of the Heart
Although the heart beats on its own, the autonomic nervous system (ANS) fine-tunes rate and strength.
| System | Main Effects | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| Sympathetic (β₁ receptors) | ↑ Heart rate (SA node), ↑ contractility, ↑ conduction | ↑ Ca²⁺ and Na⁺ influx |
| Parasympathetic (Vagus nerve) | ↓ Heart rate, ↓ conduction velocity | ↑ K⁺ efflux, ↓ Ca²⁺ influx |
🔑 High-Yield Summary Table
| Structure | Function | Rate (bpm) | Clinical Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| SA node | Pacemaker | 60–100 | Sinus rhythm |
| AV node | Delay & backup pacemaker | 40–60 | AV block → bradycardia |
| Bundle of His | Impulse to ventricles | 40–60 | Complete block → escape rhythm |
| Purkinje fibers | Final conduction | 20–40 | Ventricular rhythm in severe block |
💥 Clinical Correlations
- Arrhythmias (Dysrhythmias): Tachycardia: Fast rate (>100 bpm); Bradycardia: Slow rate (<60 bpm); Atrial fibrillation: Chaotic atrial activity, irregular rhythm; Ventricular fibrillation: Fatal — no coordinated contraction.
- Heart block: Delay or failure of conduction between atria and ventricles. Seen as prolonged PR interval or missing QRS on ECG.
- Pacemaker implantation: Used when SA/AV node fails to maintain rhythm.
🧠 Quick Recap
| Event | Wave / Feature |
|---|---|
| Atrial depolarization | P wave |
| AV nodal delay | PR interval |
| Ventricular depolarization | QRS complex |
| Ventricular repolarization | T wave |
| Atrial repolarization | Hidden (within QRS) |