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Muscular System

This bellringer provides an overview of muscle functions and types, including skeletal, smooth, and cardiac muscles. It also discusses the general functions of the muscular system and the characteristics of all muscles.

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Muscular System

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  1. Muscular System

  2. BELLRINGER 2/3/15 • What are the functions of muscles?

  3. Muscles

  4. Types of Muscle ~ 50% of body weight Work in groups to perform a function • Skeletal • Striated • Voluntary • Multinucleated • Smooth • Nonstriated • Involuntary • Cardiac • Striated • Involuntary • Intercalated disks

  5. General Functions of Muscular System • Movement • Skeletal muscle contractions move body in whole or part • Heat Production • Muscle cells produce heat via catabolism to maintain temperature homeostasis • Posture • Continued partial contraction of muscle in order to perform many functions

  6. Characteristics of all Muscle • Excitability • Respond to stimuli • Contractility • Actively shorten to exert a pull • Tension that can be harnessed by CT • Extensibility • Continue to contract over range of resting lengths • Ex: smooth muscle can be stretched to several times its original length and still contract on stimulation • Elasticity • Return to original length after contraction

  7. -mysium=CT membrane and tendon sheath Myofilaments

  8. Muscle Fiber Arrangement Parallel Pennate Bipennate Sphincter Convergent

  9. Muscle Attachment DoesNOTmove when muscle contracts Doesmove when muscle contracts

  10. Naming Muscles • Location • Function • Shape • Fiber direction • Number of heads/divisions • Points of attachment • Muscle size

  11. Location Function Fiber Direction Shape

  12. Number of divisions Size

  13. Raises eyebrows Frowning Blinking Mastication Laughing Whistling, smiling Puckering Mastication Flexes head

  14. Moves head Moves head Flexes head

  15. Superficial Back Muscles • Large, fan-shaped muscles provide force in a wide range of body positions • -EX: leaning back to straight vertical and all points in between. Shrugging, pulling scapulas together and down Rotator cuff muscles Stabilize shoulder joint, pull arm back Shoulder movement Pull the arm down, Stabilize torso during many movements (EX: bench press)

  16. Trunk Muscles - Thorax Elevate ribs

  17. Trunk MusclesAbdomen Flexes trunk Stabilizes Lower back Rotates abdomen

  18. Upper Arm Flexes Upper arm Extends forearm

  19. Flexors

  20. Extensors

  21. Upper Leg Deep muscle Vastus intermedius Biceps femoris Semimembranosus Quadricep Femoris Semitendinosus

  22. Lower Leg Plantar flexion

  23. Foot

  24. Anal and Urogenital Muscles

  25. Posture • Good Posture – body alignment that favors function with least work • Standing Position • Head and chest held high • Chin, abdomen, buttocks pulled in • Knees slightly bent • Feet firmly on ground 6 in. apart • Poor Posture - puts abnormal strain on ligaments and bones • Maintenance • Tonicity (muscle tone): muscles exert a pull against gravity • Continuous and passive partial contraction of muscles

  26. Bellringer 2/24/15 Define the following (p.200 in textbook or notes): • Prime mover (agonist) • Antagonist • Synergist • Fixator FYI-Disease Diary Due Monday. Test next Wednesday (3/4/15)

  27. Classification of Muscle Group Actions • Agonist (Prime Mover) • Muscle most responsible for movement • Antagonist • Opposes prime mover • Provides precision and control during prime mover contraction • Relaxes when prime mover contracts • Synergist • Aid prime mover • Contract at same time as prime mover • Fixator • Joint stabilizer • Maintains posture/balance during prime mover contraction

  28. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4t2X2IvGyUE

  29. Lever Systems 2nd Class 1st Class 3rd Class P = Force (push or pull) Contracting Muscle F = Fulcrum Joint L = Load Weights, etc

  30. Get to know the muscles • Using your textbook, label the muscles on the handout.

  31. Muscles & Age • Infancy & Childhood • Muscle coordination and control allows developmental sequences to occur • Aging • Muscles degenerate with age • Replaced with CT

  32. Bellringer 2/4/15 • What is the name of the large superficial calf muscle? • What is the name of the muscle that raises your eyebrows? • What is the name of the muscle that allows you to blink? HW CHECK

  33. Muscle Contraction • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BMT4PtXRCVA

  34. Space between actin Muscle cell (fiber) cytoplasm H zone Basic contractile unit of muscle fiber Sarcoplasm Z line Z line Muscle fiber membrane I band A band Bundle of microfilaments; almost fill sarcoplasm Length of myosin heads (wide, dark stripes) Length of actin (thin, light stripes) Allows impulses to travel along sarcolemma deeper into muscle cell (fiber) Network of tubules and sacs: pumps calcium ions in from sarcoplasm to store in sacs Allows impulse traveling down T tubule to stimulate adjacent sacs

  35. http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072495855/student_view0/chapter10/animation__sarcomere_contraction.htmlhttp://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072495855/student_view0/chapter10/animation__sarcomere_contraction.html

  36. Myofilaments protein molecules Holds tropomyosin in place Covers active site on actin Attracted to actin and forms crossbridge http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072495855/student_view0/chapter10/animation__breakdown_of_atp_and_cross-bridge_movement_during_muscle_contraction.html

  37. Contraction http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072495855/student_view0/chapter10/animation__action_potentials_and_muscle_contraction.html tropomyosin troponin • Synaptic vesicle travels down motor neuron and binds to motor endplate • Acetylcholine released into synaptic cleft • Ach binds to receptor on sarcolemma • Impulse travels along sarcolemma and down t-tubules • Calcium released from sarcoplasmic reticulum • Calcium binds to troponin causing conformation change • tropomyosin shifts to expose active site on actin • myosin heads bind to actin • actin filaments are pulled past the myosin head; head unattaches and reattaches to a new site….repeat • Sliding Filament Theory - sliding of thin filaments toward center of each sarcomere shortens the myofibril and muscle fiber.

  38. Excitation & Contraction Impulse sent to muscle fiber Muscle fiber creates movement Synaptic cleft Motor endplate Neuromuscular junction Synaptic vesicle (neurotransmitter) http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072495855/student_view0/chapter10/animation__function_of_the_neuromuscular_junction__quiz_1_.html

  39. Motor Unit Smaller # fibers – more precise movement Larger # fibers – more powerful contraction

  40. SR releasing Ca+2 All or NONE Ca+2 bind to troponin; Cross-bridging • Quick jerk due to brief threshold stimulus • One twitch – 1/10 sec • Rarely occur • Gradual, step-like increase in contraction strength • Series of twitch contractions 1 sec apart • Muscle contracts more forcefully after it has • contracted a few times, then when it first contracts • Warm-up before exercise • Smooth, sustained contractions • Coordinated contractions of different motor units • Multiple twitch waves add together to sustain • muscle tension for longer time • Very short periods of relaxation between peaks • of tension • Twitch waves fused into a single, sustained peak

  41. Tonicity • Continual, partial contraction of a muscle • Flaccid • Muscles with less tone than normal • Spastic • Muscles with more tone than normal

  42. Length-tension Relationship Optimal length Strongest max contraction possible Overstretched Muscle can’t develop tension due to filaments too far apart Sarcomere compressed Muscle can’t develop tension

  43. Energy Sources • ATP • Hydrolysis into ADP yields energy required for contraction • ATP binds to myosin head in order to pull actin • Fibers continually resynthesize ATP from breaking down creatine phosphate (requires glucose and oxygen) • Glucose & oxygen • Hemoglobin transfers O2 to muscle fiber • Fiber stores glucose as glycogen • At rest: Excess O2 in sarcoplasm is bound to myoglobin temporarily • Exercise: O2 concen. Decreases in muscle, so myoglobin resupplies muscle with O2

  44. Respiration • Aerobic Respiration • Requires O2 • Produces max amount of energy available from each glucose molecule • Anaerobic Respiration • Occurs when lack of O2 • Forms lactic acid • During exercise • Muscles “burn” • O2 debt • Heavy breathing during exercise in order to process lactic acid

  45. Muscle Fatigue • Muscles loses ability to contract due to lack of ATP • Suspected imbalance of ions • Problems at the neuromuscular junction • Lactic acid build up • Cramp – muscle contracts spasmodically, but does not relax completely

  46. Most body movements are a result of both types

  47. Change in Muscle Size • Atrophy – decrease in muscle size • Bed Rest: lose 1% muscle strength/day • Hypertrophy – increase in muscle size

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