Chapter 10 and 11.5-6: Muscular System and Tissue Flashcards
What is the structural organization and primary purpose of muscles in the human body?
- There are 600 human skeletal muscles
- Half our body weight
- 3 kinds of muscle tissue: skeletal, cardiac, and smooth
- Major purpose: to convert the chemical energy ATP into the mechanical energy of motion
What is the study of the muscular system?
Myology
What are the functions of the muscular system?
- Movement
- body parts, body contents in breathing, circulation, digestion
- Stability
- maintain posture
- prevent unwanted movements
- muscles only PULL
- Control of openings of passageways
- sphincters: internal muscular rings that control the movement of food, blood, and other materials in the body
- Heat production
- by skeletal muscles
- as much as 85% of our body heat
- Glycemic control
- muscles absorb and store glucose as glycogen which regulates blood sugar concentration within normal range
- problems with this contribute to diabetes (athrophied muscle)
What are fasicles and connective tissues of muscles?
- Fasicles: bundles of muscle fibers wrapped together
- Endomysium:
- thin sleeve of loose connective tissue around each fiber
- electrically insulates each muscle fiber
- Perimysium
- thicker layer of connective tissue that wraps fasicles
- Epimysium
- fibrous sheath surrounding entire muscle
- outer surface grades into fascia
- inner surface projections for perimysium
- Fascia
- sheet of connective tissue that separates neighboring muscles or muscle groups from each other and the subcutaneous tissue
- Can continue into tendon
What are circular muscles (sphincters) and two main examples?
- muscles that form rings around body openings
- obicularis oris and obicularis oculi
What are indirect and direct muscles attachments and their general features?
- Indirect attachment
- tendons connect muscle to bone
- collagen fibers of the endo, peri, and epimysium continue into tendon and from there become periosteum and matrix of bone
- aponeurosis: tendon is broad, flat sheet
- retinaculum: connective tissue band that tendons from separate muscle pass under
- tendons connect muscle to bone
- Direct (fleshy) attachment
- little separation between muscle and bone
- muscle SEEMS to emerge directly from bone
What is muscle innervation and its subtypes?
- Muscle innervation refers to the identity of the nerve that stimulates it
- every single skeletal muscular cell must get a signal from a neuron
- Spinal Nerves
- emerge from intervertebral foramina
- innervate muscles below the neck
- Plexus: weblike network of spinal nerves adjacent to the vertebral column
- Cranial nerves
- arise from the base of the brain
- emerge through the skull foramina
- innervate the muscles of the head and neck
- number CN I to CN XII
What is the prime mover of inhalation ? What is the scientific term for inhalation / exhalation?
- The diaphragm is the primary muscle for inhalation
- Inhalation = inspiration
- Exhalation = expiration
What is the deep muscle of the back?
- Erector spinae
What are muscle compartments?
- a group of functionally related muscles enclosed by fascia
- also contain nerves and blood vessels that supply the muscle group
- intermuscular septa: very thick fascia that separate one compartment from another
What is compartment syndrome?
- a blood vessel in a compartment is damaged
- blood and tissue accumulate in the compartment
- myoglobin shows up in urine
- pressure increases causing poor blood flow (ischemia)
- nerves begin to die (2-4 hr)
- then muscles begin to die (6 hr)
- treatment: immobilization of limb and fasciotomy (incision to relieve compartment pressure)
- nerves can regenerate but muscle damage is permanent
What are three terms for a muscle cell?
- muscle cell
- muscle fiber
- myofiber
Define the following: myogram, threshold, and twitch
- Myogram: a chart of the timing and strength of a muscle’s contraction
- Threshold: minimum voltage necessary to generate an action potential in the muscle fiber and produce a contraction
- Twitch: a quick cycle of contraction and relaxation when stimulus is at threshold or higher
Describe the 3 phases of a muscle twitch.
- Latent period
- very brief delay between stimulus and contraction
- Contraction phase
- time when muscle generates external tension
- Relaxation phase
- time when tension declines to baseline
- Entire twitch duration varies betweem 7 and 100 ms
Define the following:isometric muscle contraction and isotonic muscle contraction
- Isometric muscle contraction
- muscle produces internal tension but no movement
- Important in postural muscle function and antagonistic muscle joint stabilization
- Isotonic muscle contraction
- muscle changes in length with no change in tension
- concentric contraction: muscle shortens as it maintains tension (e.g. lifting weight(
- eccentric contraction: muscle lengthens as it maintains tension (e.g. slowly lowering weight)
- muscle changes in length with no change in tension