Chapter 8 Muscular System
CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Recap: -The three types of muscle in the body are skeletal, smooth, and cardiac muscle.
Structure of a Skeletal Muscle CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Structure of a Skeletal Muscle Each muscle is an organ comprised of -skeletal muscle tissue -connective tissues -nervous tissue -blood
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CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Connective Tissue Coverings Fascia: Layers of dense connective tissue that surround and separate each muscle. Fascia extends beyond the ends of the muscle and gives rise to tendons which are fused to bones
CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required fo reproduction or display Epimysium: The layer of connective tissue around each whole muscle Perimysium : The layer of connective tissue surrounding individual bundles (fascicles) within each muscle Endomysium: The layer of connective tissue around each muscle cell (fiber)
CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Skeletal Muscle Fibers -Each muscle fiber is a single cell with… -Sarcolemma: cell membrane -Sarcoplasm : cytoplasm containing many mitochondria and nuclei -Myofibrils: organelles that are separated into compartments called sarcomeres -Sarcomeres: structures that have thick and thin protein filaments
CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. The Sarcomere: -Thick filaments of myofibrils are made up of the protein myosin. -Thin filaments of myofibrils are made up of the protein actin. -The organization of these filaments produces striations.
CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. A sarcomere extends from Z line to Z line. -I bands (light bands) made up of actin filaments are anchored to Z lines. -A bands (dark bands) are made up of overlapping thick and thin filaments. -In the center of A bands is an H zone, consisting of myosin filaments only.
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CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Skeletal Muscle Contraction Muscle contraction involves several components that result in -the shortening of sarcomeres -the pulling of the muscle against its attachments.
CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. -Sliding filament theory: the myosin attaches to the binding site on the actin filament, pulls and releases it *After release, it will move on to the next actin binding site
CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Stimulus for Contraction 1. The motor neuron releases acetylcholine (signalled from brain) *Signals muscle to contract 2. Calcium is released 3. Myosin is able to bind to actin and the fiber contracts (sarcomeres shorten) How does this stop?
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CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Energy Sources for Contraction 1. Energy for contraction comes from ATP.
CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Muscle Fatigue -Muscle Fatigue: A muscle loses its ability to contract during strenuous exercise -Usually arises from the accumulation of lactic acid (lowered pH) in the muscle. -As a result, no muscle response to stimulation
CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Muscle Cramp Muscle cramp: sustained involuntary contraction *Changes in fluid around cell *Uncontrolled stimulation of muscle (dehydration…)
Muscular Response THRESHOLD STIMULUS Muscles will only respond (contract) if the stimulus strength reaches a certain point Minimum strength required to make a muscle fiber contract is called the
Muscular Response ALL – OR – NONE RESPONSE Muscles can’t “partially” contract They will either contract fully or not at all Increasing the stimulus intensity does not increase the force of a single muscle’s response
Twitches Twitch: period of contraction and relaxation of a single muscle fiber Movements result from multiple muscle fibers contracting together Fast Twitch: weight lifting, sprints, Slow Twitch: low intensity, long distance run, swimming
“Nervous” Twitches involuntarily Can be caused by: CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Skeletal muscle contracts involuntarily Can be caused by: *Muscle fatigue/strain *Stress/anxiety *Medication *Caffeine
Sustained Contractions MUSCLE TONE –Even at “rest” a muscle is contracting Important in maintaining posture When a person collapses, muscle tone has been lost
Types of Contractions ISOTONIC - Muscle changes length and produces force; causes motion ○ Ex. Lifting weights ISOMETRIC - Muscle doesn’t move but creates force Ex. Yoga
CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Smooth Muscles Smooth muscle cells: -elongated with tapered ends -lack striations tw0 relaxed smooth muscle cells
Types of Smooth Muscle Multiunit Visceral Blood vessels CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Multiunit Visceral Blood vessels Iris of the eye Individual fibers Walls of hollow organs Sheets Self-stimulating and rhythmic Peristalsis in tubes and hollow organs
CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Smooth Muscle Contraction -Slower to contract and relax than skeletal muscle -Can contract longer using the same amount of ATP (sustainable contractions)
self-exciting and rhythmic the whole heart contracts as a unit CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Cardiac Muscle - has structures that supply extra calcium, and can thus contract for longer periods intercalated disks: join cells and transmit impulses throughout the heart self-exciting and rhythmic the whole heart contracts as a unit