Chapter 9-11 Muscular System PDF
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2018
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This document, Chapter 9-11 Muscular System from Summer 2018, details the study of muscles, including their characteristics, functions, types, gross anatomy, microanatomy, and organization. It describes various muscle types, fiber types, and muscle contractions.
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1 Chapter 9 Myology- Study of the Muscles 4 characteristics 1. excitability 2. contractibility 3. extensibility 4. elasticity Main Functions: 1. movement 2. support 3. body temperature maintenance 4. guards openings (orifices) Types of muscles: - smooth...
1 Chapter 9 Myology- Study of the Muscles 4 characteristics 1. excitability 2. contractibility 3. extensibility 4. elasticity Main Functions: 1. movement 2. support 3. body temperature maintenance 4. guards openings (orifices) Types of muscles: - smooth - cardiac - skeletal Gross Anatomy: 3 concentric layers of connective tissue 1. epimysium dense irregular connective tissue; surrounds entire skeletal muscle; separates the muscle from surroundings 2. perimysium divides the muscles into compartments (containing bundles of fibers called fascicles); contains blood vesicles and nerves 3. endomysium surrounds each muscle fiber; binds fibers to each other - satellite cells between endomysium & muscles fibers; repairs damaged muscle fibers Tendon Neuromuscular Junction site of chemical communication between synaptic terminal of a neuron and skeletal muscle fibers Microanatomy: - sarcolemma - sarcoplasm - differ from regular cells: a. muscle cells (fibers) long 100mm b. multinucleated- 100; embryonic cells fuse to create muscle cells; myoblasts that don’t fuse become satellite cells in adulthood c. contain indentations in the membrane forming tubule network; transverse or T. tubule conducts electric impulse Myofibrils (100-1000) located in the sarcoplasm - length extends entire length of muscle - shortencause contractions - surrounded by mitochondria & glycogen molecules - myoglobin reddish pigment similar to hemoglobin stores O2 until needed for mitochondria Sarcoplasmic Reticulum- membrane sleeve that helps control contractions of individual myofibrils Myofibrils consist of myofilaments (bundles): a. actin- thin filaments b. myosin- thick filaments Summer 2018 2 c. troponin d. tropomyosin e. titin Sarcomere- smallest functional unit of the muscle fibers a. Z discs/ lines- separate sarcomeres b. A-band - dark area; thick filaments overlapping thin filaments c. M-lines- protein molecules adjoin thick filaments (page 246) d. H-zone- zone of thick filaments in the center of A-band e. I-band- zone of thin filaments Motor neurons- neurons that stimulate muscle tissue Synaptic vesicles- membranes sacs containing neurotransmitters acetylcholine Synaptic cleft- space between axon terminal & sarcolemma All or none principle - once a threshold stimulus is reached, muscle fibers of a motor unit (motor neuron & muscle fiber) will contract to its fullest capability or not at all Muscle atrophy & Hypertrophy: 1. disuse atrophy 2. denervation atrophy 3. hypertrophy 2 types of skeletal muscle fibers: 1. red muscle fibers high myoglobin content smaller in diameter; increase mitochondria & blood supply 2. white fibers (fast) low myoglobin, bigger diameter; low mitochondrial content & blood supply Fibers: Type 1 slow twitch, slow oxidative, fatigue resistance, high Myoglobin, high mitochondria & blood supply, high capacity to produce ATP aerobically, red, contraction velocity is slow & very resistant to fatigue Type 2 fast twitch, fast glycolytic, fatigable fibers, low myoglobin, low mitochondria & few capillaries, high amount of glycogen, white, generate ATP anaerobically, contraction are strong and fast-fatigable Type 2A(intermediate) fast twitch, fast oxidative and fatigue resistance, high myoglobin, high mitochondria & capillaries, ATP aerobic metabolism, contraction are fast, fatigue resistance, occurs infrequently Abnormal Muscle Contractions: 1. Spasm- any involuntary contraction of large groups of muscle 2. tremor- rhythmic involuntary, purposeless contraction of opposing muscle groups 3. fasciculation- involuntary, brief twitch of a muscle visible under the skin 4. fibrillation- involuntary, brief twitch of a muscle not visible under the skin Organization of muscle fibers: 4 patterns of the fasicle arrangement 1. parallel- parallel to the longitudinal axis of the muscle 2. convergent- based over a large area with a common attachment site 3. Pennate- one or more tendons run thru the body of the muscle - unipennate muscle on the same side of the tendon - bipennatemuscle on both sides of the tendon 4. circular or sphincter muscles- concentric around the opening Summer 2018 3 Summer 2018 4 origin insertion action primary actions: 1. prime movers agonists, contraction are responsible for a particular movement 2. synergist assist prime movers, prevent movement by stabilizing the joint 3. antagonist muscle who’s action oppose the agonist if agonist flexion, the antagonist produces extensions 4. fixators stabilizes the origin of the prime mover so it is efficient Names of the skeletal muscles: 1. directional indications a. rectus - straight parallel fibers run along axis of body b. transversus- fibers that run across c. obliques- run at an angle to long axis 2. unusual structure features ( # of insertion & origins) a. biceps- 2 tendons of origin b. triceps- 3 c. quadriceps- 4 3. shape a. trapezius- trapezoid b. deltoid- triangular c. rhomboideus- rhomboid d. orbicularis- circular e. longus- long f. longissimus- longest g. teres- long and round h. brevis- short i. magnus- big j. major- bigger k. maximus- biggest l. minor- small m. minimus- smallest 4. location a. externus or superficial- visible at body surface b. internal or profundus- internal c. extrinsic- muscles that position or stabilize an organ d. intrinsic- operate within an organ 5. muscle that identify their origins and insertion a. genioglossus chin + tongue = genio + glossus 6. names that include flexor, extensor, retractor, indicate the primary function of the muscle 7. Except for the platysma & diaphragm all skeletal muscles include the term “muscle”. Summer 2018