Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
1 C H A P T E R Muscle Physiology
2
Chapter Outline Skeletal muscle macrostructure and microstructure
Sliding-filament theory of muscular contraction Fiber types Types of muscle action Force production
3
Three Types of Connective Tissue: Epimysium, Perimysium, and Endomysium
4
A Motor Unit
5
Sectional View of a Muscle Fiber
6
Detailed View of Myosin and Actin Protein Filaments in Muscle
7
The discharge of an action potential from a motor nerve signals the release of calcium from the sarcoplasmic reticulum into the myofibril, causing tension development in muscle.
8
Contraction of a Myofibril: Stretched Muscle
9
Contraction of a Myofibril: Partially Contracted Muscle
10
Contraction of a Myofibril: Completely Contracted Muscle
11
Calcium and ATP are necessary for myosin cross-bridge cycling with actin filaments.
12
Type II, or fast-twitch, muscle fibers are capable of developing higher forces than Type I, or slow-twitch, muscle fibers— especially at higher velocities of muscle action.
13
The number of cross-bridges that are attached to actin filaments at any instant in time dictates the force production of a muscle.
14
Force-Velocity Curve for Eccentric and Concentric Actions
15
Three Arrangements of Muscle Fibers
Fibers parallel to tendon Unipennate muscle Bipennate muscle
16
Many factors may affect rate of cross-bridge cycling and thus force, including neural activation, calcium concentration, myosin ATPase activity, preloading, prestretch, muscle fiber type and ultrastructure, fatigue through a variety of mechanisms, and number of contractile components (myosin and actin) in parallel.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.