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Overview. Functions of Skeletal MuscleThe Anatomy of Skeletal MuscleGross anatomyMicroanatomyThe Control of Muscle Fiber ContractionThe neuromuscular junctionThe contraction cycleMuscle MechanicsThe frequency of muscle fiber stimulationThe number of muscle fibers involvedIsotonic and isome
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1. The Muscular System Chapter 7
Pgs 177-195
2. Overview Functions of Skeletal Muscle
The Anatomy of Skeletal Muscle
Gross anatomy
Microanatomy
The Control of Muscle Fiber Contraction
The neuromuscular junction
The contraction cycle
Muscle Mechanics
The frequency of muscle fiber stimulation
The number of muscle fibers involved
Isotonic and isometric contractions
Muscle elongation
The Energetics of Muscular Activity
ATP and CP reserves
ATP generation
Muscle fatigue
The recovery period
Muscle Performance
Types of skeletal muscle fibers
Physical conditioning
Cardiac Muscle Tissue
Smooth Muscle Tissue
3. Functions of Skeletal Muscle Produce movement
Maintain posture and body position
Support soft tissues
Guard entrances and exits
Maintain body temperature
4. The Anatomy of Skeletal Muscles Macroanatomy and microanatomy
We will use the CD for this!
5. Neuromuscular Junction We will use the CD for this as well!
6. The Contraction Cycle Guess what we will be using again?!
7. Muscle Mechanics Tension
An active force generated when muscle cells contract and pull on surrounding collagen fibers
Before movement, tension must overcome object’s resistance
Dependant upon object’s weight, shape, friction
Compression
Push applied to object; forces object away from source
Muscles can shorten and generate tension but do not lengthen and generate compression!
8. Muscle Mechanics All or none principle
Amt of tension produced by 1 muscle fiber depends only on # cross-bridges activated
Always produce same amt of tension
Amount of tension produced by whole muscle determined by:
Frequency of stimulation
Number of muscle fibers activated
9. The Frequency of Muscle Fiber Stimulation
10. Freq: Summation and Tetanus (Incomplete and Complete)
11. The Number of Muscle Fibers Involved Total force exerted depends on # muscle fibers recruited
Motor unit
All of the muscle fibers controlled by one motor neuron
Size indicates how fine the control of movement is
Eye vs. legs
Recruitment
Steady and smooth increase in muscular tension
Produced by increasing # of active motor units
Muscle tone
13. Isotonic Contraction
14. Isometric Contraction
15. Example: Squats
16. Muscle Elongation No active mechanism for fiber elongation
Rather, it is passive
Returns 1 of 3 ways or combo:
Elastic forces
Opposing muscle movements
Gravity
17. The Energetics of Muscular Activity We will use the wonderful CD for this!
18. Muscle Fatigue: How long can you do this?
19. Muscle Performance Considered in terms of:
Power
Maximum amount of tension produced by a particular muscle or group
Endurance
The amount of time for the individual to perform a particular activity
2 deciding factors:
Type of muscle fibers w/in the muscle
Physical condition or training
20. Types of Skeletal Muscle Fibers Fast Twitch Fibers
Contract in 0.01 seconds
Large in diameter
Lots of myofibrils
Glycogen reserves?
# of Mitochondria?
# of capillaries?
Myoglobin?
Fatigue quickly or slowly? Slow Twitch Fibers
3Xs the time to contract
Small diameter
Glycogen reserves?
# of mitochondria
# of capillaries
Myoglobin?
Fatigue quickly or slowly
21. Physical Conditioning Anaerobic activities
Hypertrophy
Enlargement of muscle fibers
Aerobic activities
22. Cardiac Muscle Tissue: Differences from Skeletal Structural Differences
Intercalated disks
Functional Differences
Pacemaker cells
Contractions last 10Xs long as skeletal
Cell membrane differences
Release of calcium increases permeability to extracellular calcium ions
Rely on only aerobic metabolism
24. Smooth Muscle Tissue: Differences from Other Muscle Structural
No myofibrils, sarcomeres, striations
Thin filaments anchored w/in cytoplasm to sarcolemma
Adjacent smooth muscle cells bound together at anchoring sites
Transmits contractile forces throughout tissue
26. Smooth Muscle Functional Differences Calcium ions trigger contractions differently
Smooth muscle cells contract over greater range of lengths
b/c actin and myosin not rigidly organized
Many cells not innervated by motor neurons
Pacesetter cells
Environmental stimulation
Hormonal stimulation