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Muscular System. Read Ch 6 Review Questions begin on page 198 S/A #2, 7, 10, 12, 18, 20, 21 At the Clinic #2, 5, 6. Overview. Over ½ of body’s mass is muscle—90% of that is skeletal muscle
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Muscular System Read Ch 6 Review Questions begin on page 198 S/A #2, 7, 10, 12, 18, 20, 21 At the Clinic #2, 5, 6
Overview • Over ½ of body’s mass is muscle—90% of that is skeletal muscle • These contractile cells have high energy needs, so it’s common to see an ample blood supply associated with muscles http://www.edukshun.info/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/big-muscles.jpg
Overview con’t: • Blood provides glucose and oxygen while removing metabolic waste products • Muscles (and nervous tissue) consume almost 70% of the food energy taken into your body daily • Muscle is as intensive a consumer of calcium as is the skeletal system—much of the Ca stored in bones is made available for the muscles’ needs.
http://phelafel.technion.ac.il/~tamarh/website/images/different-kinds-of-muscles-2.jpghttp://phelafel.technion.ac.il/~tamarh/website/images/different-kinds-of-muscles-2.jpg micro.magnet.fsu.edu/ Categorizing muscles Microscopically • Nonstriated (no lines) • Striated (lines running through)
Categorizing muscles Controllability • Involuntary (no control) • Voluntary (control)
Categorizing muscles Location • Cardiac: Involuntary, only found in heart • Smooth: Involuntary, lines digestive organs • Skeletal: voluntary muscles found attached to bones
Cardiac Muscle • Involuntary, striated muscle • Have two nuclei per cell • These branched cells communicate with one another with intercalated disks • Cardiac cells have a natural contraction cycle called the intrinsic beat • Intercalated disks help synchronize the intrinsic beat so all cardiac muscles act in unison
Smooth muscle • Non-striated, involuntary muscle • Location: found in the lining of blood vessels, digestive organs, urinary system and parts of the respiratory system
Smooth muscle • These cells produce weak involuntary contractions that can last for long periods of time • Assist with dilation and constriction of the bv and respiratory system • In the digestive tract, they produce pulsating contractions called peristalsis (moves food and wastes though system)
Skeletal muscle—our focus • Voluntary, striated muscles • Provides movement of the bones and joints • Skeletal muscle is composed of many individual cells that have fused together into a long fiber. (have many nuclei in each one)
Muscle cell structure • Sarcomere—the contractile unit of a muscle cell (there are thousands of these in one cell) • Myofibril—long chains of sarcomeres. Each muscle fiber is made up of many bundled myofibrils running parallel to one another for the length of the cell Video of sarcomere shortening
http://media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/36/2836-004-C63246A5.gifhttp://media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/36/2836-004-C63246A5.gif Muscle cell structure • Sarcolemma—the membrane of the muscle cell • Bands of proteins called myofilaments • Thick (myosin) • Thin (actin, tropomyosin and troponin)
Myofilament arrangement • Thick (myosin) and thin (actin, troponin, tropomyosin) arrange to form an overlapping pattern w/in a sarcomere. • Thin myofilaments are attached to the Z-line • In between these thin myofilaments are the thick myosin filaments which appear to be floating within the cell.
http://media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/36/2836-004-C63246A5.gifhttp://media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/36/2836-004-C63246A5.gif
Myofilament arrangement • Surrounding each sarcomere is an organelle called the sarcoplasmic reticulum (a system of tubes transporting Ca needed for contraction) http://media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/41/2841-004-8EA13F0E.gif
Functions of the Muscular System • Movement of body parts—by pulling on bones. Bones act as levers, joints as the fulcrum. • Guard entrances and exits • Posture • Stabilizing joints • Create heat
Muscle cell Function • Contraction is achieved by the simultaneous shortening of all the sarcomeres within a cell. • Three stages: Neural stimulation, contraction, relaxation.
Neural Stimulation • Takes place at the neuromuscular junction. • The nerve cell releases a neurotransmitter • neurotransmitter—a chemical used for cell to cell communication. http://www.freewebs.com/soaring_sphincter_travel_agency/nerve%20impulse2.bmp
Neural Stimulation • Muscles respond to the neurotransmitter acetylcholine (Ach). • Ach binds to receptors on the sarcolemma. • The binding of Ach affects the transport of ions across the sarcolemma www.cells.de/.../Neuromuscular-junction.jpg
Neural Stimulation • In a resting muscle, the concentration of sodium ions is normally higher in the fluid outside the muscle cell while the concentration of potassium ions is higher inside the cell. • Sodium/potassium pumps maintain these unequal ion concentrations. upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/...
Neural Stimulation • This imbalance produces an unstable condition. When stimulated by Ach the membrane loses its ability to maintain the imbalance. • Once the membrane is stimulated, it opens the ion channels permitting the free flow of sodium into the muscle cell and potassium out of the cell. • In turn, calcium stored in the sarcoplasmic reticulum is released to begin the contraction phase
Muscle Contraction www.cvphysiology.com • When calcium (released by the sarcoplasmic reticulum) binds to the troponin, contraction begins. • Troponin sits on tropomyosin on the same region where actin binds to myosin.
Muscle Contraction • Ca bumps troponin off the binding site, permitting myosin to attach to actin. • Troponin also transmits info that activates ATP synthesis around the myosin. The ATP provides energy for the myosin head to swivel and pull the myosin toward the actin.
Muscle Relaxation • Relaxation occurs when there are no more neural stimulations exciting the sarcolemma. The sodium and potassium ion levels are completely recovered • The sarcoplasmic reticulum has retrieved most of the Ca, causing the release of the myosin heads from the actin. • There is no mechanism for the muscle cell to lengthen (so we’ll discuss how that happens later in the lecture).
Review • Nerve impulse arrives at muscle cell • Ca+2 released from SR into sarcoplasm • Ca+2 combines with troponin molecules in the thick filaments of myofibrils (Myosin) • Troponin without Ca+2 doesn’t interact like this • Myosin interacts with Actin and pulls toward center • Contraction of muscle • Video of contraction occurring… • Animation of entire process…
Other factors found in muscle fibers ensuring adequate muscle contractions: • Creatine Phosphate: stores energy in muscle cells. It collects this energy from ATP and is capable of storing it for long periods of time. • Glycogen (stored form of glucose) can supply glucose when muscles cells need it to produce ATP • Myoglobin is a chemical that stores oxygen for certain muscle cells. This O2 permits muscle cells to provide large amounts of ATP during continuous or heavy work.
Muscle Attachment Fibers • Tendons—connect muscle to bone (cordlike) • Aponeuroses—connect muscles to muscles (sheetlike)
Musculature terms • Origin—fixed end (proximal end of bone) • Insertion—moveable end (distal end of bone) www.scielo.cl/.../ijmorphol/v25n4/fig37-01.jpg
Skeletal Muscle Action • Muscle cells either contract or don’t…so we get graded effects based on contraction of more individual fibers at the same time. • Strength is achieved by stimulating more individual fibers to fire • Endurance is achieved by producing contraction and relaxation groups working together.
Skeletal Muscle Action • Antagonistic effects occur when one muscle opposes or resists the action of another muscle.—if nothing else, your muscles are acting against the antagonistic force of gravity • The antagonistic actions are essential for pulling the relaxed muscle cells back to their original length.
Skeletal Muscle Action • Synergistic effects occur when muscles work together to produce a common end result…the muscles of the forearm work synergistically with the muscles of the fingers to produce a fist. http://www.dkimages.com/discover/previews/779/76289.JPG
5 golden rules of skeletal muscle • All muscles cross at least one joint • Typically the bulk of the muscle lies proximal to the joint crossed • All muscles have at least two attachments, the origin and the insertion • Muscles can only pull; they never push • During contraction, the muscle insertion moves toward the origin http://www.omnism.com/om/images/golden-rule.jpg
Body Movements • Flexor—decreases the angle of the joint by bringing the bones closer together • Extensor—extends a joint by increasing the angle between the bones
Body Movements • Rotator—movement around an axis (partway around) • Tensor—important posture/positioning muscles that make a body part more rigid or tense.
Body Movements • Abduction—moving away from the midline • Adduction—moving toward the midline
Body Movements • Depressor—produce a downward movement • Levatator—provide an upward movement • Spincter—decreases the size of an opening www.mda.org www.cescg.org
Body Movements • Pronator—motion of palm downward • Supinator—palm moves upward
Special Movements • Inversion—turning the sole of your foot medially • Eversion—turning the sole of your foot laterally
Special Movements • Dorsiflexion—pointing your toes up toward your shin • Plantar Flexion—pointing your toes downward
Muscular System Pathologies
Rigor Mortis • Calcium leakage out of the sarcoplasmic reticulum into the sarcomere. Common after death. Eventually, the muscle cells structures start to decay, causing the muscles to become soft and loose.
Strain • Most common muscle ailment • An injury due to overworking the muscle’s force on the joints. • Injury to the tendon or muscle tissue http://www.nlm.nih.gov http://www.fairview.org
Sprain • A sprain is an injury to a ligament. (A ligament is a thick, tough, fibrous tissue that connects bones together.) • Ligaments prevent abnormal movements. When too much force is applied to a ligament they can be stretched or torn. www.eorthopod.com
Contusion • Bruising of the muscle www.bruisepatch.com
Muscle Spasms • Involuntary, abnormal contractions of a muscle or muscle group • Caused by a wide range of medical conditions www.cure-back-pain.org
Muscle Cramp • Painful contraction of a muscle • Extreme muscle exertion is the most common cause of cramps, although certain poisons and bacterial infections can also cause muscle cramping www.answers.com
Paralysis • Complete failure of a muscle function • Rigid paralysis—excessive muscle stiffness • Flaccid paralysis—complete lack of muscle contraction • Many causes…including spinal injury and poisoning • Eg: Tetanus--Caused by soil bacteria that produces poisons that cause rigid paralysis
Dermatomyositis • Inflammation of the muscle and overlying skin. • Cause: unknown, but it can be treated with drugs (to reduce inflammation) and sun avoidance www.nytimes.com
Muscular dystrophies • Group of conditions that involve progressive weakness in the voluntary muscles. • Usually due to the inability of the nervous system to stimulate muscle action • Eventually results in muscle atrophy and wasting. esciencenews.com