Muscle Physiology Human Anatomy and Physiology II Oklahoma City Community College Dennis Anderson.

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Muscle Physiology Human Anatomy and Physiology II Oklahoma City Community College Dennis Anderson

Transcript of Muscle Physiology Human Anatomy and Physiology II Oklahoma City Community College Dennis Anderson.

Muscle Physiology

Human Anatomy and Physiology II

Oklahoma City Community College

Dennis Anderson

Muscle Tissue

• Skeletal Muscle

• Cardiac Muscle

• Smooth Muscle

Skeletal Muscle

• Long cylindrical cells• Many nuclei per cell• Striated• Voluntary• Rapid contractions

Cardiac Muscle

• Branching cells

• One or two nuclei per cell

• Striated

• Involuntary

• Medium speed contractions

Smooth Muscle

• Fusiform cells

• One nucleus per cell

• Nonstriated

• Involuntary

• Slow, wave-like contractions

Microanatomy of Skeletal Muscle

Z line Z line

H Band

Sarcomere Relaxed

Sarcomere Partially Contracted

Sarcomere Completely Contracted

Binding Site Tropomyosin

Troponin

Myosin

Neuromuscular Junction

Acetylcholine Opens Na+ Channel

Muscle Contraction Summary

• Nerve impulse reaches myoneural junction

• Acetylcholine is released from motor neuron

• Ach binds with receptors in the muscle membrane to allow sodium to enter

• Sodium influx will generate an action potential in the sarcolemma

Muscle Contraction Continued

• Action potential travels down T tubule

• Sarcoplamic reticulum releases calcium

• Calcium binds with troponin to move the troponin, tropomyosin complex

• Binding sites in the actin filament are exposed

Muscle Contraction Continued

• Myosin head attach to binding sites and create a power stroke

• ATP detaches myosin heads and energizes them for another contaction

• When action potentials cease the muscle stop contracting

Motor UnitAll the muscle cells controlled by one

nerve cell

Motor Unit Ratios

• Back muscles– 1:100

• Finger muscles– 1:10

• Eye muscles– 1:1

ATP

Creatine

• Molecule capable of storing ATP energy

Creatine + ATP Creatine phosphate + ADP

Creatine Phosphate

• Molecule with stored ATP energy

Creatine + ATPCreatine phosphate + ADP

Muscle Fatique

• Lack of oxygen causes ATP deficit

• Lactic acid builds up from anaerobic respiration

Muscle Atrophy

• Weakening and shrinking of a muscle

• May be caused– Immobilization– Loss of neural stimulation

Muscle Hypertrophy

• Enlargement of a muscle

• More capillaries• More mitochondria• Caused by

– Strenuous exercise

– Steroid hormones

Steroid Hormones

• Stimulate muscle growth and hypertrophy

Muscle Tonus

• Tightness of a muscle

• Some fibers always contracted

Tetany

• Sustained contraction of a muscle

• Result of a rapid succession of nerve impulses

Tetanus

Refractory Period

• Brief period of time in which muscle cells will not respond to a stimulus

Refractory

Skeletal Muscle Cardiac Muscle

Refractory Periods

Isometric Contraction

• Produces no movement

• Used in– Standing– Sitting– Posture

Isotonic Contraction

• Produces movement

• Used in– Walking– Moving any part of the body

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