BSC 2085 Lab 7 - Muscular System PDF
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Hernan Aviles
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This document contains detailed information on the muscular system, including muscle structure, movement, and naming conventions. Illustrations are used throughout to clarify the explanations.
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BSC 2085 Lab 7 MUSCULAR SYSTEM Hernan Aviles MUSCLE STRUCTURE muscles are made of muscle fibers When stimulus travels down a neuron to a muscle fiber, this fiber contracts fascicles: group of fibers perimysium: layer that...
BSC 2085 Lab 7 MUSCULAR SYSTEM Hernan Aviles MUSCLE STRUCTURE muscles are made of muscle fibers When stimulus travels down a neuron to a muscle fiber, this fiber contracts fascicles: group of fibers perimysium: layer that surrounds each fascicle endomysium: tissue filling the space between fibers (extension forms tendons) epimysium: tough tissue surrounding all fascicles 2 3 origen: end of muscle attached to the immovable bone insertion: end attached to the movable bone movements must be coordinate, smooth and precise (many muscles involved) agonist: primary muscle involved in any movement (biceps in flexion of elbow) antagonist: oppose the agonist (triceps oppose the action of biceps) synergist: contract at the same time as the agonist (brachioradialis helps biceps in flexion) Fixators: help the agonist by fixing the bone in the origen of muscle (fix the scapula in elbow’s flexion 4 MUSCLE MOVEMENTS flexion: bending a joint extension: straightening a joint dorsiflexion: flexing foot towards the shin plantar flexion: extending ankles (pointing the toes) abduction: away from the midline adduction: toward the midline supination: turning palm anteriorly pronation: turning palm posteriorly 5 protraction: moving a part of the body anteriorly retraction: moving a part of the body posteriorly elevation: raising a body part depression: lowering a body part inversion: turning the sole of the foot inward (foot only) eversion: turning the sole of the foot outward (foot only) Circumduction: circular movement (shoulder); combination of flexion, extension, aduction, abduction 6 opposition: opposable thumb (tool use) rotation: moving a body part around its axis (between first two vertebrae, hip and shoulder joints) 7 NAMING MUSCLES direction of fibers: rectus (straight), transverse (horizontal), oblique (diagonal) location: pectoralis (chest), brachialis (arm), external (outer), internal (inner), ventralis (front), abdominal (abdomen) shape: deltoid (triangular), trapezius, longus (long) origen and insertion: sternocleidomastoid (sternum, clavicle and mastoid process of temporal) number of origens: biceps, triceps, quadriceps action: flexor, extensor, levator, adductor, supinator, masseter (to masticate= to chew). 8 HISTOLOGY OF MUSCLE AND TENDONS skeletal muscle (multiple peripheral nuclei) long, cylindrical, unbranched cells with striations SKELETAL movement, facial expression, posture, breathing, speech, swallowing voluntary cardiac muscle (one central nucleus per cell) short branched cells with striations and intercalated discs CARDIAC involuntary (heart) smooth muscle (one central nucleus) SMOOTH Short fusiform cells; nonstriated viscera; iris; hair follicles, sphincters GI tract functions, labor contractions, control of airflow, erection of hairs, control of pupil 9 SKELETAL CARDIAC SMOOTH 10 11 12 HEAD AND NECK orbicularis oculi * * orbicularis oris * * * frontalis * * occipitalis * * temporalis zygomaticus major zygomaticus minor buccinator sternocleidomast oid masseter 13 14 15 16 ABDOMEN rectus abdominis external oblique internal oblique transverse abdominis diaphragm 17 18 19 CHEST pectoralis major, pectoralis minor, serratus anterior 20 BACK latissimus dorsi, trapezius 21