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Chapter 11 Physiology of the Muscular System
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General functions: Movement Heat Production Posture
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Function of the skeletal muscle tissue
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Muscle cell: Bundles of muscle fibers (cells) Extends entire length of the cell Same structures as cells, but with different names Plasma membrane – sarcolemma Cytoplasm – sarcoplasm Many mitochondria and nuclei Tubules and sacs – sarcoplasmic reticulum Typical only to muscle cells – myofibrils bundles of fine fibers that allow contraction of the muscle
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Cont. Sarcomeres – fibers running lengthwise of the muscle and consist of A bands that look striped (striated) T – tubules run transverse to the sarcomere fibers – allow for electrical signals to promote movement Sarcoplasmic reticulum allows for calcium to be stored with in its sacs Triad – these tubules ( T-tubules sandwiched between two SR sacs) allows for an electrical impulse to trigger movement
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Myofilaments Each muscle fiber has a thousand or more parallel subunits called myofibrils Beside each myofibril are thousands of thick and thin myofilaments Myofilaments composed of – myosin, actin, tropomysin, and troponin
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Contraction Shortening Page 316 box 11-2
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Excitation of the sarcolemma Skeletal muscles normally at rest Motor neurons receive message at the neuromuscular junction (synapse) Can we say “gaposis”? Neurotransmitter jumps the gap with messages and in turn releases acetylcholine This initiates an electrical impulse causing excitation
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Contraction The previously discussed impulse conducted down muscle fibers (sarcolemma) and to the T-tubules This triggers release of Calcium ions from the SR This combines with troponin and exposes actin molecules Actin then binds with myosin – this bends the myosin heads and with great force, pulls the filaments past them This shortens the myofibers (called the sliding filament theory)
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Relaxation After the SR releases Ca into sarcoplasm, it begins to pull the Ca back into the sacs. Only takes a few milliseconds This shuts down the contraction process
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ATP Adenosine triphosphate ENERGY! Re-synthesis of this high energy bond must always take place since only small amounts are stored Another high energy bond comes from creatine phosphate elevated with H.A. Catabolism of both of these comes from catabolism of foods
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Glucose / oxygen Required for continued, efficient muscle function Glucose is stored as glycogen Oxygen can be stored by cells During rest, oxygen is bound to protein molecules called myoglobin (red pigment) and contains iron to attract O-2
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Aerobic vs anerobic respiration Aerobic – oxygen Anerobic – avoid the use of oxygen Catabolic process that produces energy from glucose Anerobic respiration results in lactic acid which causes a burning sensation during or after exercise
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Why would an individual continue to breathe deeply after exercise is over?
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Methemeglobinemia Genetic flaw Both parents must be carriers for the offspring to suffer from this abnormality. Blood cannot bind to oxygen properly – blood is brown – not red in the arterial lumen TMT: methylene blue q d
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Heat production Greatest source of heat production in the body is digestion Next is muscle movement through exercise
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Electrical Impedence Myography
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Typical graph of Lou Gehrig’s Disease (motor neurons disintegrate) Serial measurements of the EIM parameter Θavg in selected muscles of a group of patients with ALS show decline as the disease progresses.
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Tetanus Smooth sustained types of contraction Smooth/sustained – tetanic contractions or tetanus Can be incomplete (short periods of relaxation) or complete (sustained)
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Muscle tone Tonic ( tone) contraction – continual, partial contraction – also called muscle tone Flaccid – reduced tone Spastic – increased tone
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Strength Graded strength principle – muscles contract at varying levels at various times Variables - Metabolism, conscious stimuli, amount of load imposed
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Exercise – effects on muscle structure Disuse atrophy – wasting Hypertrophy – enlargement Strength training – mass Endurance training (aerobic)- sustainability
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Isometric vs isotonic contractions Isotonic – tone/tension remains same length of muscle elongates while moving against a load Concentric contractions – results in shortening of the muscle (pick up a book) Eccentric contraction – movement causes lengthening of the muscle while in a contracted state (lower the book back to the table) Isometric contraction – opposite isotonic – muscle length remains the same during contraction – does’t produce movement – just tension (yoga)
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Abnormal contractions Cramp – involuntary twitches – inflammation, irritation, nutrition, fluid imbalance Convulsion – abnormal, uncoordinated tetanic contraction – brain wave abnormality, fever, neurological damage Fibrillation – fibers contract out of timing with each other – flutter – no productive movement occurs
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Cardiac muscle Exclusive to the heart Striated involuntary muscle Pericardium, myocardium, endocardium
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Smooth muscle Involuntary Visceral – walls of hollow organs – GI, U, Repro. – peristalsis Multiunit – arrector pili of the skin, small blood vessels
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Abnormalities Strain Myalgia Contusion Infection – poliomyelitis Muscular dystrophy – genetic – atrophy replaced by adipose tissue Myasthenia gravis – muscle weakness Hernia – inguinal, umbilical, abdominal
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Muscular dystrophy
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Myasthenia gravis
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