. Gastric slow waves occur at around 3 cycles-per-minute in humans and exhibit significance variances in both amplitudes and propagation velocities in the stomach due to the existence of a gradient of resting membrane
potential gradient, interstitial cells of Cajal distributions, and gastric wall thickness. Gastric slow wave frequency, propagation velocity, and amplitude demonstrate significant inter-species differences. Extracellular bioelectrical recording studies have demonstrated that gastric slow waves originate from a pacemaker region located on the greater curvature of the stomach. Entrainment of intestinal slow waves forms "frequency plateaus" in a piece-wise manner along the intestine. Similar to the stomach, intestinal slow waves frequency, propagation velocity, and amplitude also demonstrate significant inter-species differences. In
uterine smooth muscle, slow waves have not been consistently observed. Uterine muscle seems to generate action potentials spontaneously. In gastrointestinal smooth muscle, the slow-wave threshold can be altered by input from endogenous and exogenous innervation, as well as excitatory (
acetylcholine and
Substance P) and inhibitory (
vasoactive intestinal peptide and
nitric oxide) compounds. ==References==