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Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e. 2. INTRODUCTION. The voluntarily controlled muscles of the body make up the muscular system.The muscular system and muscle tissue contribute to homeostasis by producing movement, stabilizing body position, regulating organ volume, moving substances w
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1. 1 Chapter 11 The Muscular System
Lecture Outline
2. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 2 INTRODUCTION The voluntarily controlled muscles of the body make up the muscular system.
The muscular system and muscle tissue contribute to homeostasis by producing movement, stabilizing body position, regulating organ volume, moving substances within the body, and producing heat.
This chapter discusses how skeletal muscles produce movement and describes the principal skeletal muscles.
3. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 3 Chapter 11The Muscular System Skeletal muscle major groupings
How movements occur at specific joints
Learn the origin, insertion, function and innervation of all major muscles
Important to allied health care and physical rehabilitation students
4. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 4 HOW SKELETAL MUSCLES PRODUCE MOVEMENT
5. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 5 Muscle Attachment Sites:Origin and Insertion Skeletal muscles shorten & pull on the bones they are attached to
Origin is the bone that does not move when muscle shortens (normally proximal)
Insertion is the movable bone (some 2 joint muscles)
Fleshy portion of the muscle in between attachment sites = belly
6. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 6 Tenosynovitis Inflammation of tendon and associated connective tissues at certain joints
wrist, elbows and shoulder commonly affected
Pain associated with movement
Causes
trauma, strain or excessive exercise
7. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 7 Lever Systems and Leverage A lever is a rigid structure that moves around a fixed point, the fulcrum (F)
The lever is acted on by two different forces: (Figure 11.1b).
resistance (load) (L), which opposes movement
effort (E) which causes movement Bones serve as levers and joints serve as fulcrums.
Leverage, the mechanical advantage gained by a lever, is largely responsible for a muscle’s strength and range of motion (ROM), i.e., the maximum ability to move the bones of a joint through an arc.
8. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 8 Levers
9. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 9 Levers are categorized into three types – First class levers (EFL) e.g. a seesaw – the head on the vertebral column (Figure 11.2a)
Second-class (FLE) eg. a wheelbarrow(Figure 11.2b)
Third-class (FEL) (Figure 11.1b) e.g. forceps - the elbow joint (Figure 11.2c).
10. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 10 Muscle acts on rigid rod (bone)that moves around a fixed point called a fulcrum
Resistance is weight of bodypart & perhaps an object
Effort or load is work doneby muscle contraction
Mechanical advantage
the muscle whose attachment is farther from the joint will produce the most force
the muscle attaching closer to the joint has the greater range of motion and the faster the speed it can produce Lever Systems and Leverage
11. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 11 First - Class Lever Can produce mechanical advantage or not depending on location of effort & resistance
if effort is further from fulcrum than resistance, then a strong resistance can be moved
Head resting on vertebral column
weight of face is the resistance
joint between skull & atlas is fulcrum
posterior neck muscles provide effort
12. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 12 Second - Class Lever Similar to a wheelbarrow
Always produce mechanical advantage
resistance is always closer to fulcrum than the effort
Sacrifice of speed for force
Raising up on your toes
resistance is body weight
fulcrum is ball of foot
effort is contraction of calf muscles which pull heel up off of floor
13. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 13 Third - Class Lever Most common levers in the body
Always produce a mechanical disadvantage
effort is always closer to fulcrum than resistance
Favors speed and range of motion over force
Flexor muscles at the elbow
resistance is weight in hand
fulcrum is elbow joint
effort is contraction of biceps brachii muscle
14. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 14 Fascicle Arrangements A contracting muscle shortens to about 70% of its length
Fascicular arrangement represents a compromise between force of contraction (power) and range of motion
muscles with longer fibers have a greater range of motion
a short fiber can contract as forcefully as a long one.
15. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 15 Coordination Within Muscle Groups Most movement is the result of several muscle working at the same time
Most muscles are arranged in opposing pairs at joints
prime mover or agonist contracts to cause the desired action
antagonist stretches and yields to prime mover
synergists contract to stabilize nearby joints
fixators stabilize the origin of the prime mover
scapula held steady so deltoid can raise arm
16. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 16 HOW SKELETAL MUSCLES ARE NAMED The names of most of the nearly 700 skeletal muscles are based on several types of characteristics.
These characteristics may be reflected in the name of the muscle.
The most important characteristics include the direction in which the muscle fibers run, the size, shape, action, numbers of origins, and location of the muscle, and the sites of origin and insertion of the muscle
Examples from Table 11.2
triceps brachii -- 3 sites of origin
quadratus femoris -- square shape
serratus anterior -- saw-toothed edge
17. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 17 PRINCIPLE SKELETAL MUSCLES Exhibits 11.1 through 11.20 list the principle skeletal muscles in various regions of the body.
Figure 11.3 shows general anterior and posterior views of the muscular system.
The exhibits contain objectives, an overview which provides a general orientation to the muscles, muscle names, origins, insertions, and actions, “relating muscles to movements,” innervation, and Figures (11.4-11.23) that show the muscles under consideration.
18. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 18 Muscles of Facial Expression Arise from skull & insert onto skin
Encircle eyes, nose & mouth
Express emotions
Facial Nerve (VII)
Bell’s palsy = facial paralysis due
19. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 19 Muscles of Facial Expression Orbicularis oculi closes the eye
Levator palpebrae superioris opens the eye
Orbicularis oris puckers the mouth
Buccinator forms the muscular portion of the cheek & assists in whistling, blowing, sucking & chewing
20. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 20 Extrinsic Muscles of the Eyeballs Extrinsic muscles insert onto white of eye
Fastest contracting & most precisely controlled
Cranial nerves 3, 4 & 6 innervate the six muscles
4 Rectus muscles & 2 obliques
Intrinsic muscles are found within the eyeball
Levator palpebrae superioris raises eyelid
21. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 21 Muscles that Move the Mandible Masseter, temporalis & pterygoids
Arise from skull & insert on mandible
Cranial nerve V (trigeminal nerve)
Protracts, elevates or retracts mandible
Temporalis & Masseter elevate the mandible (biting)
temporalis retracts
22. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 22 Jaw Muscles -- Deep Dissection Lateral pterygoid protracts mandible
sphenoid bone to condyle of mandible
Medial pterygoid elevates & protracts mandible
sphenoid bone to angle of mandible
Together move jaw side to side to grind food.
23. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 23 Muscles that Move the Tongue 4 extrinsic mm ariseelsewhere, but insertinto tongue
Genioglossus
from inside tip of mandible
Styloglossus
from styloid process
Palatoglossus
from hard palate
Hyoglossus
from hyoid bone
Together move tongue in various directions
Intubation is necessary during anesthesia since Genioglossus relaxes & tongue falls posteriorly blocking airway
24. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 24 Muscles of the Floor of the Oral Cavity Suprahyoid muscles lie superior to hyoid bone.
Digastric m. extends from mandible to mastoid process
used to open the mouth
Mylohyoid m. extends from hyoid to mandible
supports floor of mouth & elevates hyoid bone during swallowing
Stylohyoid & Geniohyoid elevate the hyoid during swallowing
25. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 25
26. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 26 Muscles that Move the Head Sternocleidomastoid muscle
arises from sternum & clavicle & inserts onto mastoid process of skull
innervated by cranial nerve XI (spinal accessory)
contraction of both flexes the cervical vertebrae & extends head
contraction of one, laterally flexes the neck and rotates face in opposite direction
27. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 27 Muscles of Abdominal Wall Notice 4 layers of muscle in the abdominal wall
28. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 28 Muscles of Abdominal Wall 4 pairs of sheetlike muscles
rectus abdominis = vertically oriented
external & internal obliques and transverses abdominis
wrap around body to form anterior body wall
form rectus sheath and linea alba
Inguinal ligament from anterior superior iliac spine to upper surface of body of pubis
Inguinal canal = passageway from pelvis through body wall musculature opening seen as superficial inguinal ring
Inguinal hernia = rupture or separation of abdominal wall allowing protrusion of part of the small intestine (more common in males)
29. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 29 Transverse Section of Body Wall Rectus sheath formed from connective tissue aponeuroses of other abdominal muscles as they insert in the midline connective tissue called the linea alba
30. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 30 Muscles Used in Breathing Breathing requires a change in size of the thorax
During inspiration, thoracic cavity increases in size
external intercostal lift the ribs
diaphragm contracts & dome is flattened
During expiration, thoracic cavity decreases in size
internal intercostal mm used in forced expiration
Diaphragm is innervated by phrenic nerve (C3-C5) but intercostals innervated by thoracic spinal nerves (T2-T12)
31. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 31
32. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 32 Female Pelvic Floor & Perineum Both the pelvic diaphragm ( coccygeus & levator ani) and the muscles of the perineum fill in the gap between the hip bones
supports pelvic viscera & resists increased abdominal pressure during defecation, urination, coughing, vomiting, etc
pierced by anal canal, vagina & urethra in females
levator ani may be damaged during episiotomy during childbirth (urinary incontinence during coughing)
33. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 33 Muscles of Male Perineum Perineum contains more superficial layer of muscle
urogenital triangle contains external genitals
muscle arrangement forms urogenital diaphragm assists in urination (external urethral sphincter) and ejaculation (ischiocavernosus, bulbospongiosus)
anal triangle contains anus
external anal sphincter
34. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 34 Stabilizing the Pectoral Girdle Anterior thoracic muscles
Subclavius extends from 1st rib to clavicle
Pectoralis minor extends from ribs to coracoid process
Serratus anterior extends from ribs to inner surface of scapula
Posterior thoracic muscle
Trapezius extends from skull & vertebrae to clavicle & scapula
Levator scapulae extends from cervical vertebrae to scapula
Rhomboideus extends from thoracic vertebrae to vertebral border of scapula
35. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 35 Axial Muscles that Move the Arm Pectoralis major & Latissimus dorsi extend from body wall to humerus.
36. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 36 Muscles that Move the Arm Deltoid arises from acromion & spine of scapula & inserts on arm
abducts, flexes & extends arm
Rotator cuff muscles extend from scapula posterior to shoulder joint to attach to the humerus
supraspinatus & infraspinatus: above & below spine of scapula
subscapularis on inner surface of scapula
37. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 37 Flexors of the Forearm (elbow) Cross anterior surface of elbow joint & form flexor muscle compartment
Biceps brachii
scapula to radial tuberosity
flexes shoulder and elbow & supinates hand
Brachialis
humerus to ulna
flexion of elbow
Brachioradialis
humerus to radius
flexes elbow
38. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 38 Extensors of the Forearm (elbow) Cross posterior surface of elbow joint & forms extensor muscle compartment
Triceps brachii
long head arises scapula
medial & lateral heads from humerus
inserts on ulna
extends elbow & shoulder joints
Anconeus
assists triceps brachii in extending the elbow
39. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 39 Cross-Section Through Forearm If I am looking down onto this section is it from right or left arm?
40. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 40 Muscle that Pronate & Flex Pronator teres
medial epicondyle to radius so contraction turns palm of hand down towards floor
Flexor carpi muscles
radialis
ulnaris
Flexor digitorum muscles
superficialis
profundus
Flexor pollicis
41. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 41 Muscles that Supinate & Extend Supinator
lateral epicondyle of humerus to radius
supinates hand
Extensors of wrist and fingers
extensor carpi
extensor digitorum
extensor pollicis
extensor indicis
42. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 42 Retinaculum Tough connective tissue band that helps hold tendons in place
Extensor & Flexor retinaculum cross wrist region attaching from bone to bone (carpal tunnel syndrome = painful compression of median nerve due to narrowing passageway under flexor retinaculum
43. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 43 Intrinsic Muscles of the Hand Origins & insertions are within the hand
Help move the digits
Thenar muscles move the thumb
Hypothenar muscles move the little finger
Opposition, flexion, extension, abduction & adduction
44. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 44 Muscles that Move the Vertebrae Quite complex due to overlap
Erector spinae fibers run longitudinally
3 groupings
spinalis
iliocostalis
longissimus
extend vertebral column
Smaller, deeper muscles
transversospinalis group
semispinalis, multifidis & rotatores
run from transverse process to dorsal spine of vertebrae above & help rotate vertebrae
45. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 45 Scalene Muscle Group Attach cervical vertebrae to uppermost ribs
Flex, laterally flex & rotate the head
46. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 46 Muscles Crossing the Hip Joint Iliopsoas flexes hip joint
arises lumbar vertebrae & ilium
inserts on lesser trochanter
Quadriceps femoris has 4 heads
Rectus femoris crosses hip
3 heads arise from femur
all act to extend the knee
Adductor muscles
bring legs together
cross hip joint medially
see next picture
Pulled groin muscle
result of quick sprint activity
stretching or tearing of iliopsoas or adductor muscle
47. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 47 Adductor Muscles of the Thigh Adductor group of muscle extends from pelvis to linea aspera on posterior surface of femur
pectineus
adductor longus
adductor brevis
gracilis
adductor magnus (hip extensor)
48. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 48 Muscles of the Butt & Thigh Gluteus muscles
maximus, medius & minimus
maximus extends hip
medius & minimus abduct
Deeper muscles laterally rotate femur
Hamstring muscles
semimembranosus (medial)
semitendinosus (medial)
biceps femoris (lateral)
extend hip & flex knee
Pulled hamstring
tear of origin of muscles from ischial tuberosity
49. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 49 Cross-Section through Thigh 3 compartments of muscle with unique innervation
anterior compartment is quadriceps femoris innervated by femoral nerve
medial compartment is adductors innervated by obturator nerve
posterior compartment is hamstrings innervated by sciatic nerve
50. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 50 Muscles of the Calf (posterior leg) 3 muscles insert onto calcaneus
gastrocnemius arises femur
flexes knee and ankle
plantaris & soleus arise from leg
flexes ankle
Deeper mm arise from tibia or fibula
cross ankle joint to insert into foot
tibialis posterior
flexor digitorum longus
flexor hallucis longus
flexing ankle joint & toes
51. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 51 Muscles of the Leg and Foot Anterior compartment of leg
extensors of ankle & toes
tibialis anterior
extensor digitorum longus
extensor hallucis longus
tendons pass under retinaculum
Shinsplits syndrome
pain or soreness on anterior tibia
running on hard surfaces
Lateral compartment of leg
peroneus mm plantarflex the foot
tendons pass posteriorly to axis of ankle joint and into plantar foot
52. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 52 Muscles of the Plantar Foot Intrinsic muscles
arise & insert in foot
4 layers of muscles
get shorter as go into deeper layers
Flex, adduct & abduct toes
Digiti minimi muscles move little toe
Hallucis muscles move big toe
Plantar fasciitis (painful heel syndrome) chronic irritation of plantar aponeurosis at calcaneus
improper shoes & weight gain
53. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 53 Compartment Syndrome Skeletal muscles in the limbs are organized in units called compartments.
In compartment syndrome, some external or internal pressure constricts the structures within a compartment, resulting in damaged blood vessels and subsequent reduction of the blood supply to the structures within the compartment.
Without intervention, nerves suffer damage, and muscle develop scar tissue that results in permanent shortening of the muscles, a condition called contracture.
54. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 54 IM injection Intramuscular injection penetrates the skin, subcutaneous tissue and enters the muscle.
They are given when rapid absorption is necessary, for large doses, or when a drug is irritating to subcutaneous tissue.
Common sites of injection are the gluteus medius, vastul lateralis, and deltoid.
Intramuscular injections are faster than oral medications, but slower than IV.
55. Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e 55 end