TheCompleteMuscular System

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The Muscular System

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Transcript of TheCompleteMuscular System

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The Muscular System

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or “Everything you ever wanted to know about

Muscles, but were afraid to ask” !!!

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Did you know that ?

- more than 50% of body weight is muscle !

- And muscle is made up of proteins and water

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The Muscular System

• Muscles are responsible for all movement of the body

• There are three basic types of muscle– Skeletal– Cardiac– Smooth

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Info About Muscles

• Only body tissue able to contract

• create movement by flexing and extending joints

• Body energy converters (many muscle cells contain many mitochondria)

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3 Types of Muscles

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Three types of muscle

Skeletal Cardiac Smooth

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Classification of Muscle

Skeletal- found in limbs

Cardiac- found in heart

Smooth- Found in viscera

Striated, multi- nucleated

Striated, 1 nucleus

Not striated, 1 nucleus

voluntary involuntary involuntary

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Characteristics of Muscle

• Skeletal and smooth muscle are elongated• Muscle cell = muscle fiber• Contraction of a muscle is due to movement

of microfilaments (protein fibers)• All muscles share some terminology

– Prefixes myo and mys refer to muscle– Prefix sarco refers to flesh

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Shapes of Muscles

• Triangular- shoulder, neck• Spindle- arms, legs• Flat- diaphragm, forehead• Circular- mouth, anus

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Skeletal Muscle

• Most are attached by tendons to bones• Cells have more than one nucleus

(multinucleated)• Striated- have stripes, banding• Voluntary- subject to conscious control• Tendons are mostly made of collagen fibers• Found in the limbs• Produce movement, maintain posture,

generate heat, stabilize joints

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Structure of skeletal muscle

• Each cell (fibre) is long and cylindrical• Muscle fibres are multi-nucleated• Typically 50-60mm in diameter, and up

to 10cm long• The contractile elements of

skeletal muscle cells aremyofibrils

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Skeletal muscle - Summary

• Voluntary movement of skeletal parts

• Spans joints and attached to skeleton

• Multi-nucleated, striated, cylindrical fibres

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Smooth Muscle

• No striations• Spindle shaped• Single nucleus• Involuntary- no conscious control• Found mainly in the walls of hollow organs

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Smooth muscle• Lines walls of viscera

• Found in longitudinal or circular arrangement

• Alternate contraction of circular & longitudinal muscle in the intestine leads to peristalsis

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Structure of smooth muscle

• Spindle shaped uni-nucleated cells• Striations not observed • Actin and myosin filaments are present(

protein fibers)

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Smooth muscle - Summary

• Found in walls of hollow internal organs

• Involuntary movement of internal organs

• Elongated, spindle shaped fibre with single nucleus

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Cardiac Muscle

• Striations• Branching cells• Involuntary• Found only in the heart• Usually has a single nucleus, but can have

more than one

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Cardiac muscle

• Main muscle of heart• Pumping mass of heart• Critical in humans• Heart muscle cells

behave as one unit• Heart always contracts

to it’s full extent

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Structure of cardiac muscle• Cardiac muscle cells (fibres) are

short, branched and interconnected• Cells are striated & usually have 1

nucleus• Adjacent cardiac cells are joined

via electrical synapses (gap junctions)

• These gap junctions appear as dark lines and are called intercalated discs

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Cardiac muscle - Summary

• Found in the heart• Involuntary rhythmic

contraction• Branched, striated

fibre with single nucleus and intercalated discs

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Muscle Control

Type of muscle

Nervouscontrol

Type of control

Example

SkeletalSkeletal Controlled by CNS

Voluntary Lifting a glass

Cardiac Regulated by ANS

Involuntary Heart beating

Smooth Controlled by ANS

Involuntary Peristalsis

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Types of Responses

• Twitch-– A single brief contraction– Not a normal muscle function

• Tetanus– One contraction immediately followed by

another– Muscle never completely returns to a relaxed

state– Effects are compounded

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Where Does the Energy Come From?

• Energy is stored in the muscles in the form of ATP

• ATP comes from the breakdown of glucose during Cellular Respiration

• This all happens in the Mitochondria of the cell

• When a muscle is fatigued (tired) it is unable to contract because of lack of Oxygen

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Exercise and Muscles

• Isotonic- muscles shorten and movement occurs ( most normal exercise)

• Isometric- tension in muscles increases, no movement occurs (pushing one hand against the other)

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How are Muscles Attached to Bone?

• Origin-attachment to a movable bone• Insertion- attachment to an immovable

bone• Muscles are always attached to at least 2

points• Movement is attained due to a muscle

moving an attached bone

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Muscle Attachments

Origin

Insertion

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Flexion

Types of Musculo-Skeletal Movement

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Extension

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Hyperextension

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Abduction, Adduction & Circumduction

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Rotation

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More Types of Movement……

• Inversion- turn sole of foot medially• Eversion- turn sole of foot laterally• Pronation- palm facing down• Supination- palm facing up• Opposition- thumb touches tips of fingers

on the same hand

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The Skeletal Muscles

There are about 650 muscles in the human body. They enable us to move, maintain posture and generate heat. In this section we will only study a sample of the major muscles.

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SternocleidomastoideusFlexes and Rotates Head

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MasseterElevate Mandible

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TemporalisElevate & Retract Mandible

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TrapeziusExtend Head, Adduct, Elevate or

Depress Scapula

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Latissimus DorsiExtend, Adduct & Rotate Arm Medially

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DeltoidAbduct, Flex & Extend Arm

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Pectoralis MajorFlexes, adducts & rotates arm medially

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Biceps BrachiiFlexes Elbow Joint

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Triceps BrachiiExtend Elbow Joint

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Rectus AbdominusFlexes Abdomen

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External ObliqueCompress Abdomen

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External IntercostalsElevate ribs

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Internal IntercostalsDepress ribs

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DiaphragmInspiration

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Forearm Muscles• Flexor carpi—Flexes wrist• Extensor carpi—Extends wrist• Flexor digitorum—Flexes fingers• Extensor digitorum—Extends fingers• Pronator—Pronates • Supinator—Supinates

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Gluteus MaximusExtends & Rotates

Thigh Laterally

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Rectus Femoris

Flexes Thigh, Extends Lower Leg

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GracilisAdducts and Flexes Thigh

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SartoriusFlexes Thigh, & Rotates Thigh

Laterally

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Biceps Femoris

Extends Thigh & Flexes Lower Leg

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Gastrocnemius

Plantar Flexes Foot & Flex Lower Leg

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Tibialis AnteriorDorsiflexes and Inverts Foot