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The Muscular System
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Four Functions
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Four Functions Irritability Contractibility Elasticity Conductivity
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Types of Muscle Tissue
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Types of Muscle Tissues
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Types of Muscle Tissue All highly vascular for transport of oxygen, CO2, waste and sugars Human body has three types:
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Skeletal Muscle
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Skeletal Muscle Made of elongated cells called muscle fibers
Each fiber has many nuclei and striations Striations: Skeletal muscles are voluntary muscles and work in pairs Antagonistic:
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Function of Skeletal Muscles
Five major functions:
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Smooth Muscle
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Smooth Muscle Forms the walls of the stomach, intestines, blood vessels, and internal organs Individual cells are spindle shaped with one nucleus No striations
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Cardiac Muscle
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Cardiac Muscle Location: Cells are cigar shaped Intercalated disc:
Shares three characteristics with other types of muscle: Intercalated = inserted between
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Moving Muscles Muscles are attached to the outer layer of bone with a tough fibrous cord called a tendon Origin: Insertion: Action: Most muscles work in pairs; one contracts while one relaxes for smooth movement Flexor: Extensor:
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Muscle Structure
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Muscle Structure From the outside in… Epimysium: Fascicle: Perimysium:
Muscle fiber: muscle cell, large, long, cylindrical, multinucleated and made mostly of microfilaments Sarcolema Sarcoplasma Sarcosomes Sarcoplasmic reticulum Endomysium
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The Sarcomere Each muscle fiber is made up of threadlike structures called myofibrils Myofibrils – Actin: Myosin: These overlap, giving the striated appearance Thin actin filaments are anchored to a structure called the Z line Region from one Z line to the next is called…
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The Sarcomere
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The Sarcomere Unit of muscle contraction is called the sarcomere
Z disc: boundary found on either end of the sarcomere I, A, H bands: in-between Z discs, alternating light and dark bands I band – first band moving in from Z disc, composed of actin, light in color A band – second band, composed of actin and myosin, dark in color H Zone – middle of sarcomere, only myosin present, relatively light in color but darker than the I band H Zone – middle of the sarcomere M line – dark line in the middle of H Zone
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Sliding Filament Theory
In May 1954, Hugh Huxley and Allan Huxley published their findings of the sliding filament theory The theory stated that skeletal muscle contracted when two types of filaments, consisting of the proteins myosin and actin, “slid” past each other without either filament’s length actually changing
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Muscular Contraction
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Steps of Muscular Contraction
The Central Nervous System initiates a sequence to begin the sequence of events leading to contraction Action potential from the motor neuron moves down to terminal end and then calcium ions (Ca++) diffuse into the terminal Ca++ trigger the synaptic vesicles to release acetylcholine (ACh) ACh diffuses across synaptic clef to a receptor site on the sarcolemma ACh cause new action potential to spread from nerve to muscle Action potential spreads over the sarcolemma until it finds an opening It enters the opening to the sarcoplasmic reticulum, where it triggers the release of Ca++ into the sarcoplasm Ca++ cause active sites on actin to be exposed Myosin crossbridges link up with the active sites on actin Actin moves inward, sarcomere shortens, muscle fibers contract and use ATP Action potential = impulse
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Stopping Muscular Contraction
Acetylcholinesterase (AChE - enzyme) is released as muscle contracts and neutralizes the ACh No more action potential is traveling to muscle Calcium does not tighten so the crossbridges on mysoin release Muscles relax
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