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MUSCULAR SYSTEM

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MUSCULAR SYSTEM CHAPTER 6 Muscular system anatomy 600 + skeletal muscles Origin the immovable connection anchor Insertion movable connection Muscles ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MUSCULAR SYSTEM


1
MUSCULAR SYSTEM
  • CHAPTER 6

2
Introduction
  • Muscle comes from the Latin word mus meaning
    little mouse
  • Makes up nearly half of the bodys mass
  • Muscles can only CONTRACT or shorten
  • Responsible for all body movement, interior as
    well as exterior.

3
3 TYPES of MUSCLE
  1. SKELETAL- long, multinucleate cells with
    striations. Voluntary muscle that can contract
    slow or fast
  2. CARDIAC- uni-nucleate cells with striations and
    intercalated discs. Involuntary muscle that has
    slow contractions.
  3. SMOOTH-(VISCERAL)- single strands uni-nucleate
    with no striations. Involuntary muscle with slow
    contractions.

4
MUSCLE CELLS
  • All MUSCLE CELLS are extremely elongated and
    called a MUSCLE FIBER.
  • The prefixes myo , mys , and sarco will
    all refer to muscle.
  • All muscle cells contract the same way by
    overlapping microfilaments in the cell called
    myofilaments.

5
FUNCTIONS of MUSCLE
  1. MOVEMENT- internal (blood, digestive system) and
    external
  2. MAINTAIN POSTURE- pull against gravity
  3. STABILIZE JOINTS- (good example is shoulder
    joint)
  4. GENERATE BODY HEAT- if body temp drops too low we
    shiver

6
Parts of SKELETAL MUSCLE (pg 164)
  • Layers of connective tissue surround parts of
    muscle- MYSIUM
  • Follow the prefixes.
  • Muscle is bundled into groups

7
  • Outermost layer ?
  • EPIMYSIUM- dense connective tissue that surrounds
    the muscle
  • Collects connective tissue from each muscle
    fibers to form tendon or aponeurosis
  • TENDON- strong cordlike tissue that connects
    muscle to the periosteum of bone
  • APONEUROSIS- flat sheet of connective tissue
    that attached muscle to bone, cartilage, skin

9.2 / 9.2
9.23 / 9.22
8
  • FASCICLES- bundles of muscle fibers
  • PERIMYSIUM penetrates into the muscle and
    covers fascicles

9.2 / 9.2
9
  • MUSCLE FIBERS- individual cells
  • ENDOMYSIUM envelopes muscle fibers

9.2 / 9.2
10
MICROSCOPIC ANATOMY of SKELETAL MUSCLE FIBER
  • SARCOLEMMA- membrane around the muscle cell- many
    openings

sarcolemma
11
MICROSCOPIC ANATOMY of SKELETAL MUSCLE FIBER
  • T TUBULE- small openings in the sarcolemma that
    allow ions to enter deep into the muscle fiber

T TUBULE
12
MICROSCOPIC ANATOMY of SKELETAL MUSCLE FIBER
  • SARCOPLASMIC RETICULUM- Specialized smooth
    endoplasmic reticulum that stores Calcium ions to
    release it on demand

Sarcoplasmic reticulum
13
Description of SARCOMERE
14
  • Each muscle fiber is made of many repeating
    chains called SARCOMERES.
  • SARCOMERES connect at an area called the Z-DISC

Z-disc
9.4 / 9.4
Sarcomere
15
  • Each fiber contains multiple myofibrils
  • MYOFIBRIL bundles of contractile elements- 2
    types of filaments myosin and actin

Nucl.
9.7 / 9.7
Nucl.
Mitoch.
16
MYOFIBRILS
  • ACTIN- thin myofilament that connects to the
    Z-disc
  • MYOSIN- thick myofilament that does not connect
    to Z disc

Myosin
Actin
17
  • Muscle as a whole appears to have striations
    caused by alternating light and dark bands.
  • DARK BANDS called A Bands- Where there is myosin
  • LIGHT BANDS- called I Bands- where myosin is
    lacking

A band
I band
9.4 / 9.4
Sarcomere
18
MYOFIBRIL
  • I bands thin actin filaments enter sarcomere
    from each Z line
  • I bands are long and thread-like
  • Actin forms framework for myosin to pull on

IV
19
Neuromuscular junction
  • Where neurons and muscle cells meet (they dont
    actually touch)
  • SYNAPTIC CLEFT- tiny gap between neuron and
    muscle cell.

20
(No Transcript)
21
  • Steps in a Muscular Acitvation
  • STEP 1 Impulse reaches the axon terminal
    (neuromuscular junction)
  • One muscle fiber gets input from one neuron

22
  • STEP 2 -Axon terminal releases thousands of
    vesicles containing a small chemical cube
    (acetylcholine)
  • STEP 3- Acetylcholine drifts across the synaptic
    cleft and binds to receptors opening up the tubes
    for Na ions to DEPOLARIZE the cell
  • -depolarization is all or nothing

23
  • STEP 4- depolarization sends an electrical
    muscle impulse in the muscle fiber
  • STEP 5- Muscle impulse travels down sarcolemma
    and enters the T-tubules (holes) and causes
    release of Ca2 from sarcoplasmic reticulum
  • Step 6- An extracellular enzyme
    (acetylcholinesterase) destroys the leftover
    acetylcholine thus stopping contraction

24
Steps in a Muscular Acitvation
25
Steps in contraction of sarcomere SLIDING
FILAMENT THEORY
  • STEP 1- In resting fibers
  • Cytoplasmic Ca2 concentration is normally low
  • Because Ca2 is low- chemicals block actin
    binding sites for myosin

Tropomyosin
Troponin
Myosin
26
  • STEP 2. Ca2 binds to actin causing the
    configuration change and opening up binding sites
    for myosin
  • STEP 3- Myosin head binds to actin via
    cross-bridges then changes its shape and pulls
    actin together
  • STEP 4- ATP is used to break myosin cross-bridges

27
  • STEP 5-Myosin can rebind to another actin
    sub-unit and repeats the process as long as Ca2
    levels are high and ATP is available
  • RIGOR MORTIS happens after death because no more
    ATP is made to break actin/myosin cross-bridges

ADPPheat
ATP
28
  • A band thick myosin fibers
  • myosin subunits have small protein regions that
    pull on actin called MYOSIN HEADS or CROSSBRIDGES

29
  • I bands and A bands must overlap
  • H zone central region of A band between ends of
    I band- will get smaller when muscle contracts

30
  • When Ca2 levels are elevated, troponin changes
    its conformation (shape) and causes tropomyosin
    to move and exposes binding sites on actin for
    myosin

9.11 / 9.10
Mysoin binding sites
Ca2
31
SLIDING FILAMENT THEORY
32
MOTOR UNIT
  • One nerve cell (neuron) and all the skeletal
    muscle cells it stimulates
  • One neuron can have one axon terminal (ending
    point) or many depending on the muscle stimulated

33
5 GOLDEN RULES of Skeletal Muscle
  • 1. All Muscles cross at least one joint
  • 2. Typically, the bulk of the muscle lies
    proximal to the joint crossed.
  • 3. All muscles have at least two attachments-
    origin and insertion
  • 4. Muscles can only pull, they never push
  • 5. During contraction , the muscle insertion
    moves toward the origin

34
Muscular system anatomy
  • 600 skeletal muscles
  • Origin the immovable connection anchor
  • Insertion movable connection
  • Muscles may have 1 origin and 1 insertion, OR
    more of both

35
Muscles work in groups
  • Prime mover -one that predominately causes the
    motion
  • Synergists nearby muscles assisting with
    motion
  • Fixators- hold a bone still or stabilize origin
    (core muscles or girdle muscles)
  • Antagonist (opposes a motion) - relaxes

36
JOINT MOTIONS
  • 1. Flexion decrease joint angle (elbow curl)
  • 2. Extension increase joint angle (straighten
    elbow)
  • Hyperextension extend past anatomical
    position (sometimes painful)

37
JOINT MOTIONS
  • 3. Abduction move away from midline (lift arm
    sideways)
  • 4. Adduction move toward midline (let arm fall)

38
JOINT MOTIONS
  • 5. Rotation move around an axis (twist arm)
    (turn head)
  • 6. Circumduction move in a circular path (ball
    and socket joints)

39
SPECIAL JOINT MOVEMENTS
  • FOOT AND ANKLE
  • 7. Dorsiflexion lift foot
  • 8. Plantar flexion pointing toes downward
  • 9. Eversion sole outwards
  • 10. Inversion sole inwards (cause of sprained
    ankles)

40
SPECIAL JOINT MOVEMENTS
  • RADIUS AND ULNA
  • 11. Supination palms up (cup of soup)
  • 12. Pronation palms down

41
SPECIAL JOINT MOVEMENTS
  • THUMB
  • 13. OPPOSITION- allows thumb to touch the ends
    of other fingers opposable thumb

42
SPECIAL JOINT MOVEMENTS
  • 14. Protraction thrust outward (jaw)
  • 15. Retraction pull it back (jaw)
  • 16. Depression make lower (jaw or ribs)
  • 17. Elevation make higher (jaw or ribs)

43
NAMING OF SKELETAL MUSCLES
  • CLUES TO FOLLOW
  • DIRECTION OF MUSCLE -
  • rectus straight oblique angle
  • MUSCLE SIZE-
  • maximus, minimus, longus
  • 3. LOCATION- many muscles are named for their
    location- temporalis

44
NAMING OF SKELETAL MUSCLES
  • NUMBER OF ORIGINS-
  • biceps, triceps, quadriceps-
  • ACTION OF MUSCLE-
  • extensor, flexor, adductor
  • SHAPE OF MUSCLE-
  • deltoid- triangular rhomboid- rhombus
  • LOCATION OF ORIGIN OR INSERTION

45
DEPOLARIZATION / REPOLARIZATION
  • In resting cell there is a high concentration of
    K inside the cell and Na outside the cell.
  • When enough acetylcholine diffuses across
    synaptic cleft gates open and Na rushes into
    the cell causing DEPOLARIZATION.
  • K ions diffuse out of the cell and the
    SODIUM-POTASSIUM PUMP is used to REPOLARIZE the
    cell.
  • - 3 sodiums are pumped out to every 2 potassiums
    pumped in

46
GRADED RESPONSES (pg 172)
  • I. Muscle mechanics
  • THRESHOLD STIMULUS
  • muscle fiber contracts only after the stimulating
    impulse reaches a minimum voltage ? threshold
    stimulus (image a muscle stimulation machine)

47
  • III. Measuring muscle responses
  • once stimulus exceeds threshold fibers in the
    motor unit will contract and relax called a
    TWITCH

48
  • B. REFRACTORY
  • interval after contraction during which the
    muscle fiber WILL NOT respond
  • During this time muscle cell is repolarizing

49
  • C. SUMMING OF CONTRACTIONS
  • a muscle fiber can increase its contraction
    strength with successive stimuli
  • the effect may be due to incomplete calcium
    pumping out of cytoplasm
  • incomplete relaxation between contractions allows
    one contraction to build on another

50
  • RECRUITMENT
  • as the load is increased on a muscle, additional
    motor units can be brought into the contraction
  • power muscles (ex. quadriceps) have motor units
    with thousands of fibers
  • finesse muscles have comparatively few fibers
    per unit more control (1 neuron per 10 muscle
    fibers)

51
  • SUSTAINED CONTRACTIONS
  • small motor units are active first
  • larger power units become active a little later
  • continuous muscle contraction consists of many
    motor units becoming active (some relaxing and
    contracting) but maintaining a summed force
  • muscle tone - resting contractions of a few
    fibers (posture)

52
TETANUS
  • When muscle stimulation is so fast that there is
    no refractory period- muscle stays contracted.
  • (muscle stimulation machine turned up too high)

53
TYPES OF CONTRACTIONS
  • ISOTONIC - myofibrils shorten producing tension
    (moving weight through a range of motion)
  • ISOMETRIC produce tension without shortening
    (pushing on an immovable object)

54
MUSCLE FATIGUE / OXYGEN DEBT
  • Oxygen debt
  • 1.When metabolism uses up available oxygen the
    cell uses anaerobic metabolism to try to maintain
    ATP via lactic acid production
  • 2. Prolonged oxygen debt causes a significant
    increase in lactic acid levels (lowered pH)
    the burn and later muscle pain
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