The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle...

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The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology

Transcript of The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle...

Page 1: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

The Muscular System

Anatomy & Physiology

Page 2: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Muscles: the machines of the body

Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious

decision Striated: striped in appearance Multinucleate: Cells long; more nuclei More mitochondria for energy

production 500+ muscles, 40-50% body weight

Page 3: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Skeletal Muscle Extras

Soft and fragile yet TOUGHExerts TREMENDOUS powerPower provided by bundles of muscle fibers wrapped in connective tissueConnective tissue coverings allows for transmission of blood and nerves to muscles & provides support

Page 4: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Functional Characteristics of Skeletal Muscle

Produces movement: for locomotion, manipulation and responding to the external environment; also for expressing emotionsMaintaining posture: works continuously to fight downward pressure of gravity

Page 5: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Functional Characteristics of Skeletal Muscle

Stabilizing joints: muscle tendons stabilize and reinforce joints that have poor articulating surfacesGenerating heat: heat is a by-product of muscular activity; maintains normal body temperature

Page 6: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Skeletal Muscle Interactions

Muscles are arranged in the body to either work together or work in opposition of each otherNumber 1 Rule of Muscle Activity: MUSCLES ONLY PULL*** THEY NEVER

PUSH! In other words, muscle contractions

are caused by SHORTENING of fibers

Page 7: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Skeletal Muscle Interactions

Insertion: the movable attachment of a muscleExamples: biceps tendon attachment to radial tuberosity

Origin: the fixed, immovable point of attachmentExamples: biceps tendon attachment to greater tubercleA muscle contraction involves a muscle’s

insertion moving toward its origin

Page 8: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Origins and Insertions

Page 9: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

4 Functional Groups of Skeletal Muscles

1.) Agonists (prime movers): a muscle that provides the major force for providing a specific movement Example: biceps brachii- prime mover

of elbow flexion

Page 10: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

4 Functional Groups of Skeletal Muscles

2.) Antagonists: muscles that oppose/reverse a movement; relaxed when the agonist is active; helps regulate action of agonist by providing resistance Can also be agonists Example: the triceps brachii is the

antagonist to the biceps during elbow flexion

Page 11: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

4 Functional Groups of Skeletal Muscles

3.) Synergists: “work together”; aids agonist by promoting the same movement or reducing unnecessary movements that might occur as the agonist contracts Example: biceps brachii and

brachioradialis in elbow flexion

Page 12: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

4 Functional Groups of Skeletal Muscles

4.) Fixators: a synergist that immobilizes a bone or a muscle’s origin Example: erector spinae (muscles for posture)

All types of muscles work together to provide smooth, coordinated and precise movements. Any one muscle can be in any functional group, dependant on its action

Page 13: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Detailed Skeletal Muscle

Deep fascia: sheet/band of dense connective tissue covering musclesEpimysium: connective tissue covering many fascicles, all bound together

Page 14: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Detailed Skeletal Muscle

Fascicle: a bundle of fibers wrapped in perimysium

Perimysium: connective tissue surrounding a bundle of muscle fibers

Endomysium: connective tissue surrounding each muscle fiber

Aponeuroses: sheetlike epimysia that connects muscle to each other and to cartilage/bone

Page 15: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Detailed Skeletal Muscle

Tendon: cordlike band of epimysia connecting muscles to bones Durable and able

to cross bony projections

Small in diameter to fit in crowded joint spaces

Page 16: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Nervous Stimulation of a Muscle Cell

Skeletal muscle cells possess unique abilities: Excitability: can receive & respond to a

stimulus Contractility: they can shorten Extensibility: lengthen or stretch Elasticity: cells return to resting form after

contracted or stretched

When a skeletal muscle contracts, it is told to do so by the nervous system

Page 17: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Nervous Stimulation of a Muscle Cell

Motor Neuron: nerve extending from spinal cord to muscle fiber Motor Unit: one motor neuron and all the skeletal muscle cells it stimulatesNeuromuscular Junction: where the end of the nerve and the beginning of the muscle fiber meets Synaptic cleft: space between nerve and

muscle fiber

Page 18: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Motor Unit

Page 19: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Nervous Stimulation of a Muscle Cell

Action Potential: an electrical current that can cause a muscular contraction Neurotransmitter: a chemical that carries a signal from the nerve to the muscle; continues the nervous stimulationAcetylcholine (ACh): the neurotransmitter specific to muscles

Page 20: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Nervous Stimulation of a Muscle Cell

The nervous system sends a neural signal to the motor unit. This causes a release of ACh into the neuromuscular junction, where it binds to receptors on the muscle cell. This causes an action potential to run throughout the muscle cell, initiating a muscle contraction.

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Synaptic Cleft

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Microscopic Anatomy

Page 23: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Microscopic Anatomy of Skeletal Muscle

Muscle cell = muscle fiberSarcomere: contractile units of myofibrils, aligned end-to-endMyofibril: contractile proteins of muscle cells; lie parallel along length of fiber Thin myofilaments: actin Thick myofilaments: myosin

Page 24: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Microscopic Anatomy of Skeletal Muscle

A band: where the myosin filaments are alignedH Zone: less dense portion of A band where thin filaments don’t overlap thick filamentsZ line: separates sarcomeres; where actin filaments attachI band:light bands; where the actin filaments are aligned; extends to tips of myosin filaments

Page 25: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Sarcomere

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Graded Responses of Skeletal Muscle Contraction

A graded response: the degree of muscle shortening is dependant on 1. The speed of muscle stimulation 2. The number of muscle cells

stimulated

Page 27: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Speed of Stimulation

Muscle Twitch: a single, brief contraction caused by a mistake of the nervous systemSumming of Contractions: when nervous impulses are delivered to a muscle at a rapid rate so it can’t relax between impulses; the contractions are summed(added) to create a smooth, strong contractionTetanus: no relaxation between contractions; smooth and sustained

Page 28: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Number of Cells Stimulated

Small, weak contractions: few cells initiatedLarge, strong contractions: all motor units are active and all muscle cells stimulated

Page 29: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Types of Skeletal Muscle Contractions

Isotonic: same tone or tension Myofilaments

slide, muscle shortens & movement occurs

Page 30: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Types of Skeletal Muscle Contractions

Isometric: same length Muscles DO NOT

shorten Myosin

myofilaments do not move, tension in the fibers build

Muscle tries to move but cannot

Page 31: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Energy for Muscle Contractions

There are 3 different energy systems in the body that provide for muscle contractionsDefinitions: Creatine Phosphate (CP): high energy molecule

only in muscles which help replenish energy stores

Adenosine Triphoshate (ATP): energy source in the body

Glucose: blood sugar Glycogen: storage form of blood sugar

Page 32: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Energy for Muscle Contractions

Lactic Acid: a byproduct of an anaerobic pathway; causes muscle burningAerobic: using oxygen during activityAnaerobic: not using oxygen during activity

Page 33: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Energy Systems

There are 3 ways energy is utilized for muscular activity: 1. ATP-PC/Rapid Recovery

Anaerobic, lasting no more than 20 seconds ATP production rate is rapid ATP stores broken down rapidly and

resupplied by creatine phosphate (transfers a phosphate to ADP)

More creatine stored in muscles than ATP

Page 34: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Energy Systems

2. Lactic Acid/Anaerobic Breaks down glucose for energy without

using oxygen Muscles are working too fast for oxygen &

glucose to be delivered by aerobic respiration

Results in build up of lactic acid in muscles: promotes muscle fatigue and soreness

Page 35: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Lactic Acid/Anaerobic Continued

Muscle fatigue: when a muscle is unable to contract even though it is still being stimulated.

Oxygen Debt: occurs during prolonged muscle activity; can’t get oxygen fast enough for the muscle’s needs; lactic acid builds up leading to fatigue; repaid by breathing deeply until the muscles receive enough oxygen to get rid of lactic acid and make more ATP and creatine phosphate

Page 36: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Energy Systems

3. Aerobic Respiration During light exercise, ATP stores are

regenerated by using oxygen Can last for hours if glucose supplies are

present Used in endurance activities

Page 37: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Types of Skeletal Muscle Fibers

There are 2 different kinds: 1. Slow twitch

For endurance Speed of contraction is slow Uses aerobic respiration Low glycogen stores-more fats used Slow rate of fatigue

Page 38: The Muscular System Anatomy & Physiology. Muscles: the machines of the body Skeletal Muscle Characteristics Voluntary: move due to a conscious decision.

Types of skeletal muscle fibers

2. Fast twitch Explosive movements for short distances Speed of contraction very fast Some aerobic, some anaerobic fibers High glycogen stores but fatigues quickly

The distribution of muscle fibers is not complete until the teenage years. It varies between muscles, within muscles and between people.