Abstract
In cats under pentobarbital anaesthesia, intramotoneuronal administrations of 4-aminopyridine significantly prolong the falling phase of the antidromic action potential but have much less effect on the orthodromic action potential. 4-aminopyridine probably blocks the fast K channels involved in the repolarization of the membrane and indirectly activates ionic channels through enhancement of synaptic transmission, also suggested by the potentiation of excitatory postsynaptic potentials. In many cells, 4-aminopyridine depresses the amplitude and prolongs the time course of the after-hyperpolarization; therefore 4-aminopyridine may also partly block Ca2+-activated K+ channels.
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