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The Muscular System
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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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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
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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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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 are myofibrils
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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
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Structure of smooth muscle
Spindle shaped uni-nucleated cells Striations not observed
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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
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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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Day 2: Sliding Filament Theory
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Muscle Control Type of muscle Nervous control Type of control Example
Skeletal Controlled by CNS Voluntary Lifting a glass Skeletal Cardiac Regulated by ANS Involuntary Heart beating Smooth Controlled by ANS Involuntary Peristalsis CNS = central nervous system ANS = autonomic nervous system
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Muscular System Functions
Provides voluntary movement of body Enables breathing, blinking, and smiling Allows you to hop, skip, jump, or do push-ups Maintains posture Produces heat
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Functions Continued Causes heart beat Directs circulation of blood
Regulates blood pressure Sends blood to different areas of the body
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Functions Continued Provides movement of internal organs
Moves food through digestive tract (peristalsis) Enables bladder control Causes involuntary actions Reflex actions Adjusts opening of pupils Causes hair to stand on end
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M u s c l e Muscles are made up of bundles of muscle fibers, called fascicles Fascicle is a bundle of muscle fibers A muscle fiber is a muscle cell….made up of many small myofibrils Myofibrils contain filaments Two types of protein filaments T I s s u e A n a t o m y Muscle Fascicle Muscle Fibers Myofibrils Filaments
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Myofibril Contain two types of protein filaments
Actin- thin protein filaments Myosin - thick protein filaments Z disc - point of anchor of actin Sarcomere - functional unit of a myofibril, region between Z discs,
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Structure of skeletal muscle
Muscular System Structure of skeletal muscle
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Mechanics of a Muscle Contraction
When each sarcomere becomes shorter it causes each myofibril to become shorter. When each myofibril becomes shorter it causes the muscle fibers to become shorter When each muscle fiber shortens the overall muscle contracts. Sarcomere
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Sarcomere
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Sliding Filament Theory
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Three roles for ATP in the contraction of muscle.
Provide the energy for the power stroke (myosin head bends) B. Disconnecting the myosin head from actin Actively transporting Ca++ (calcium) out to the sarcoplasmic reticulum
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RIGOR MORTIS Condition in which muscles become rigid after death
Why…Lack of ATP leads to the inability of the cells to actively pump calcium back into the sarcoplasmic reticulum and the myosin heads are unable to detach from the actin.
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