Quiz 1.6 Flashcards

1
Q

Summation

A

The overall effect of added stimuli; before you get back to baseline you stimulate again

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2
Q

Tetanus

A

Sustained maximal tension due to high frequency stimulation

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3
Q

Motor unit

A

Single motor neuron and all of the muscle fibers it innervates (3- 2000)
Smallest functional unit of muscle contraction

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4
Q

Motor unit recruitment

A

Muscle force is proportional to # of MUs recruited (CB foundations)
and proportional to rate of stimulation (only to an extent- Tetanus)
Synchronization of firing impulses may increase force (multiple muscles working vs. just one)

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5
Q

Fiber type affects…

A

muscle force, rate of force production, and recruitment order

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6
Q

Type I

A

Slow shortening speed, small, low force, low fatiguability

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7
Q

Type IIa

A

Fast shortening speed, Large, high force, medium fatigue

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8
Q

Type IIb

A

Fast shortening speed, larger, high force, high fatigue (withstand force for short amount of time)

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9
Q

Fast vs. Slow peak force

A

Fast twitch peak force > slow twitch peak force

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10
Q

Fast vs. slow rate of production

A

takes more time for slow twitch to generate peak force
AKA smaller rate of force production

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11
Q

Muscle’s fiber comp.

A

All fibers within a MU are the SAME, but within a muscle there are a mixture of fibers

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12
Q

Henneman’s size principal

A

Order of recruitment
1. Type I first (hold force for longer, takes more time to get to max force)
2. Type IIa second
3. Type IIb last (most force but can’t withstand)
Reduce force goes other way –> controlled smooth gradation of force

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13
Q

Changing fibers

A

Some is genetic but you can modify between type IIa and IIb with training

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14
Q

Arrangement of sarcomeres affects

A

force production, excursion (length), and velocity

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15
Q

Types of fiber arrangements

A

parallel: side to side, greater force
Series: end to end, greater shortening velocity
See example on slide

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16
Q

Muscle fiber architecture

A

Arrangement of contractile components affects force production

17
Q

Muscle shapes

A

Longitudinal (esophagus)
Unipennate (Lumbricals)
Bipennate (Gastroc.)
Fusiform (Biceps brachii)

18
Q

Sarcomeres in series

A

Muscle excursion and velocity are proportional to number of crossbridges/fibers in series
total change in length = sum of change of length of series fibers
IF you increase the change in length you increase velocity (aka shorten more in same amount of time)

19
Q

Sarcomeres in parallel

A

Muscle FORCE is proportional to number of crossbridges/fibers active in parallel
Muscle force = sum of force of parallel fibers
muscle force = avg force of series fibers

20
Q

Angle of pennation

A

See slides