Post-tetanic potentiation


Post-tetanic potentiation is a form of synaptic plasticity which is short-lived and results in increased frequency of miniature excitatory postsynaptic potentials or currents with no effect on amplitude in the spontaneous postsynaptic potential. It usually lasts in the range of several minutes. PTPs are observed when synapses are stimulated with repetitive pulses, by means of prolonged trains of stimuli applied at high frequencies.
PTPs are thought to result primarily from the buildup of calcium concentration in the axon terminal of the presynaptic neuron during the stimulus train. However, this is a topic under debate as changes that last this long outlive the rate at which calcium is transported out of the presynaptic neuron.
In some cases, depression can be observed instead of potentiation following the tetanic stimulus.