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Muscular Performance
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Isotonic: the muscle contracts and shortens (muscle length changes), giving movement. Nearly all training you do is isotonic.
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Isometric: muscle contracts but does not shorten, giving no movement.
Muscle length doesn’t change, tension does. Ex. Pushing against a wall
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Which one is A? B?
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A single stimulus-contraction-relaxation sequence in a
TWITCH A single stimulus-contraction-relaxation sequence in a muscle fiber.
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LATENT PERIOD Between stimulus & response (contractile mechanism is not yet activated but calcium is beginning to spread) 0.001 sec.
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STIMULUS Nerve message arrives
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Sarcomeres shorten (active sites and cross bridges are interacting)
CONTRACTION Sarcomeres shorten (active sites and cross bridges are interacting) .o4 sec.
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RELAXATION Cross bridges detach 0.05 sec
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Sending an impulse before muscle is relaxed
SUMMATION Sending an impulse before muscle is relaxed Incomplete versus Complete Tetanus
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TETANUS Sustained contraction due to continued stimulus
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MUSCLE TONE Some fibers are always contracting to help maintain posture, balance, and firmness of muscles.
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MUSCLE SPINDLES Specialized sensory cells responding to stretch-increases muscle awareness
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Energy for Contraction
1- stored ATP: 3-6 seconds of energy 2- Creatine Phosphate (cp): 6-10 seconds of energy ADP+CPATP+creatine 3- Aerobic 36 ATP out of 1 glucose 4- Anaerobic- 2 ATP out of 1 glucose a. Lactic acid builds up and muscles fatigue b. Oxygen debt
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Rigor Mortis: Muscle stiffness after death
when you die, calcium seeps out of SR (In the absence of ATP the cross-bridges are not able to detach from the active sites and the muscle locks in the contracted position)
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Enzymes eventually break down the myofilaments 15-25 hours later!
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Cramp Lactic acid causes contraction without impulse
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