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Muscles HCS SLO 2
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Types of Muscles Smooth muscles
Location: Makes up the walls of hollow body organs, blood vessels, respiratory, passageways Cell Characteristics: Tapered at each end, branching networks, non-striated Control Action: Involuntary Produces peristalsis; contracts and relaxes slowly, may sustain contraction
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Smooth Muscle
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Types of Muscle Cardiac Muscle Location: Wall of the heart
Cell Characteristics: Branching networks; special membranes between cells; single nucleus; lightly striated Control Action: Involuntary Pumps blood out of heart; self-excitatory my nervous system and hormones
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Cardiac muscle
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Types of Muscle Skeletal Muscle Location: Attached to bones
Cell Characteristics: Long and cylindrical; multinucleated; heavily striated Control Action: Voluntary Produces movement at joints; stimulated by nervous system; contracts and relaxes rapidly
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Skeletal Muscle
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Three Primary Functions of skeletal Muscles
Movement of the skeleton - muscles are attached to bones and contract to change position of the bones at a joint Maintenance of posture - a steady partial contraction of muscle, known as muscle tone, keeps the body in position Generation of heat - muscles generate most of the heat needed to keep the body at 37 degrees Celsius
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The Mechanics of Muscle Movement
Most muscles have two or more points of attachment to the skeleton. Muscles are attached to a bone at each end by a cordlike extension called a tendon. One end of the bone is attached to a relatively stable, less movable attachment called the origin The other end of the muscle attaches to a body part that the muscle puts into action. This is called the insertion
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Tendons, origins and insertions
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Fascia or Deep Fascia covers, separates and protects skeletal muscle
Ligaments are bands of connective tissue that connect a bone to another bone Cartilage is found on the bone surfaces of freely movable joints and form a smooth layer also known as articular cartilage. Some complex joints such as the knee, also have additional cartilage between the bones (crescent-shaped medial and lateral meniscus)
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Ligaments of the knee
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fascia
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cartilage
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How Muscles are named Location – using a nearby bone, a position such as lateral, medial, internal or external Size – using terms such as maximus, major, minor, longus, or brevis Shape – such as circular (orbicularis), triangular (deltoid) or trapezoid (trapezius) Direction of fibers – including straight (rectus) or angled (oblique)
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How Muscles are named Number of heads (attachment points)- example biceps, triceps and quadriceps Action – as in flexor, extensor, adductor, abductor or levator
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