Hey everyone,
My question is, what would happen if you raised the extracellular potassium concentration for a neuron to be very large (like 220 mMol)?
I believe it would cause an influx of K+ ions through the membrane and you'd end up getting a very positive charge inside the cell. What effect would that have on action potentials? Would they just stop then? I guess one AP would fire, then the cell would stay depolarized. What would this do to Na/K ATPase? Would it just stop as there is already a lot of K+ or would it keep going?
Also, what would happen if you raised the extracellular Na+ concentration to very large (like 220 mMol)? I assume there would be less of a change because Na+ already has a large concentration outside the cell, but it may result in more K+ efflux to balance out the resting Vm, since there would be more positively charged ions outside the membrane.
What would happen if you removed all Na+ from the extracellular fluid? Specifically, what would happen to Vm? I suppose action potentials would not occur because for an action potential to fully happen the cell needs Na+ to depolarize the cell to around +30 (I believe?) And I would think K+ would leak out, going down the electrochemical gradient, which is stronger due to the absence of Na+. I'm confused with what that would do to the Vm though. Wouldn't it eventually flow to an equilibrium, or no?
Please help, I've got ideas, but I need some clarification and help to understand this.