Using lectures to identify student misconceptions: a study on the paradoxical effects of hyperkalemia on vascular smooth muscle

Author:

Bordes Stephen J.1ORCID,Gandhi Jason1,Bauer Blake1,Protas Matthew2,Solomon Nadia1,Bogdan Lukasz1,Brummund Dieter1,Bass Brittany3,Clunes Mark4,Murray Ian V. J.456

Affiliation:

1. Medical Student Research Institute, St. George’s University School of Medicine, St. George’s, Grenada

2. School of Medicine, State University of New York Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, New York

3. Northwell Health, Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, New York

4. Department of Neuroscience, Physiology and Behavioral Sciences, St. George’s University School of Medicine, St. George’s, Grenada

5. Department of Biology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas

6. Department of Physiology, Engineering Medicine, Texas A&M University, Houston, Texas

Abstract

Medical students have difficulty understanding the mechanisms underlying hyperkalemia-mediated local control of blood flow. Such control mechanisms are crucial in the brain, kidney, and skeletal muscle vasculature. We aimed to identify medical students’ misconceptions via assessment of students’ in-class knowledge and, subsequently, improve future teaching of this concept. In-class polling was performed with the TurningPoint clicker response system ( n = 860) to gauge students’ understanding of three physiological concepts related to hyperkalemia: membrane potential ( Vm), conductance, and smooth muscle response. Vm includes the concepts of equilibrium potential ( Veq) for specific ions, as well as driving force (DF =  Vm − Veq). Students understood the concept of DF (~70% answered correctly), suggesting their understanding of Vm. However, students misunderstood that hyperkalemia results in depolarization (~52% answered correctly) and leads to an increase in potassium conductance (~31% answered correctly). Clarification of the type of smooth muscle as vascular increased the percentage of correct responses (~51 to 73%). The data indicate that students lacked knowledge of specific potassium conductance in various muscle types, resulting in divergent responses, such as the canonical depolarization in skeletal muscle versus hyperpolarization in smooth muscle cells during hyperkalemia. Misunderstanding of this crucial concept of conductance is directly related to the students’ performance. Furthermore, we connected the paradoxical effect of hyperkalemia to pathological acute and chronic hyperkalemia clinical scenarios.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

General Medicine,Physiology,Education

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