Muscular System 1 - Introduction Flashcards
Describe the functions of the muscular body system
P
M
F
S
P
F
G
Produce movement
Maintain posture and body position
Stabilise joints
Help blood flow
Protect underlying structures
Form body walls
Generate heat
What are the special characteristics of muscle tissue?
Excitable
Contractible
Extensible
Elastic
Why are skeletal muscles considered organs?
Muscles are composed of muscle tissue, epithelial tissue, connective tissue and nervous tissue.
What does the gross anatomy of a skeletal muscle involve?
A typical skeletal muscle has a muscle belly (contractile portion) and tendons that attach it to the bone at points that are called attachments, or origins and insertions.
Label the gross anatomy of a skeletal muscle?
What is an Aponeurosis and where are they found?
- An aponeurosis is a flattened muscle tendon where muscle attaches to a bone or fascia.
- Found in flat-shaped muscles.
What is fascia?
Fascia is a thin layer of connective tissue outside the epimysium that surrounds individual muscles.
What are the roles of fascia?
- Separates and groups individual muscles.
- Transmits mechanical tension generated by muscles.
- Attaches and stabilise muscles.
- Reduces friction between muscles.
Label the fascial layers on the cross-section of the arm?
Identify the different types of Fascicle arrangement and examples of muscles associated with them?
What supplies and signals muscle fibre?
The axon branch of a somatic motor neuron supplies every muscle fibre in a skeletal system & it signals the fibre to contract.
Define the motor unit?
The functional unit of a muscle.
What does a motor unit consist of?
- A motor neuron.
- All muscle fibers it controls.
Label this motor unit?
Define the origin and insertion of a skeletal muscle?
Origin:
The end of the muscle attached to the bone being pulled during muscular contraction.
***Usually the proximal attachment.
Insertion:
The end of the muscle attached to a fixed, or stabilised bone.
***Usually the distal attachment.