How Do We Move? Flashcards
List the functions of muscle.
- movement of the body.
- maintenance of posture.
- respiration.
- production of body heat.
- communication.
- constriction of organs and vessels.
- contraction of the heart.
List the function properties of muscle.
- contractility.
- excitability.
- extensibility.
- elasticity.
Name the connective tissue layers found in and around skeletal muscle.
- epimysuim: surrounds a whole muscle.
- perimysium: surrounds a group of muscle fibres.
- endomysium: surrounds individual muscle fibres.
What is a muscle fascicle?
A group of muscle fibres.
What is the role of tendons in skeletal muscle.
Transferring the force created by the shortening of the muscle through the tendon then to bones.
Describe the generalised structure of a skeletal muscle cell.
- sarcolemma (plasma membrane).
- sarcoplasm (cytoplasm).
- multiple nuclei at periphery.
- lots of mitochondria.
- myofibrils (cylindrical organelles with sarcoplasm).
- sarcoplasmic reticulum (=smooth endoplasmic reticulum).
- transverse (T) tubule.
Name the components of thin myofilaments.
- actin: has a binding site for myosin.
- tropomyosin: covers the binding sites on actin.
- troponin: contains a binding site for calcium (Ca).
Name the components of thick myofilaments.
Myosin.
Why is calcium essential to the process of muscle contraction?
It triggers contraction by reaction with regulatory proteins that in the absence of calcium prevent interaction of actin and myosin.
What are the main reasons why ATP is essential to the process of muscle contraction.
Required for the bending of myosin heads and the release of myosin from actin.
How do muscles vary the amount of tension they produce?
- Increasing or decreasing frequency of nerve impulses = SUMMATION.
- Recruiting more or removing motor units =RECRUITMENT.
Define a motor unit.
- A motor neuron and the muscle fibres innervated by its axon.
- can contain a hundred to thousands of muscle (cells) fibres.
What is ment by isometric muscle contraction and how does it differ from an isotonic contraction?
- isometric: no movement (holding contraction), tension generated equals load.
- isotonic is when tension is greater than the load but isometric is when tension is NOT greater than the load.
What is concentric contraction?
Overcomes opposing resistance and muscle shortens. Tension is greater than load.
What is eccentric contraction?
Tension maintained but muscle lengthens. Tension is less than load.
What are the components of the neuromuscular junction?
- pre-synaptic terminal.
- synaptic cleft.
- postsynaptic membrane (or motor end plate).
What is excitation-contraction coupling?
The sequence of events from an action potential on the surface of the muscle cell to the interaction of the myofilaments (mechanisms whereby action potentials on the sarcolemma lead to actin and myosin interaction).
Describe the various conventions by which muscles are named.
- by shape.
- by number of heads (where two or more muscle bellies share a common tendon).
- by direction of fibres.
- by region or attachment.
- by action.
- some other reason.
Explain how a muscles action is determined.
- if a muscle crosses a joint it will act upon it.
- line of pull (muscle fasicle/fibre direction).
- bony attachments: many have 2 or more attachments, shortening of muscle brings points together.