WEEK 5 Flashcards

1
Q

Muscle Functions

A
  • stabilise joints
  • move bones
  • maintain posture
  • propel substances around (and in/ out of) the body
  • generate heat
  • protect some visceral organs
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2
Q

Composition of Skeletal muscles

A
  • skeletal muscle fibres
  • blood vessels
  • nerves
  • connective tissue
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3
Q

Origin

A

Attachment of a muscle that remains relatively fixed during muscular contraction

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4
Q

Insertion

A

Movable attachment of a muscle

  • muscle pull, never push: contraction of muscle fibre shortens muscle length and pulls the insertion towards the origin
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5
Q

Prime Mover

A

Muscle that provides the major force for the specific movement
- e.g. quadriceps femora’s extends the leg at the knee joint

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6
Q

Antagonist

A

Muscle that oppose or revers a particular movement
- e.g. biceps femoris flex the leg at the knee joint

Prime mover and it antagonist are located on opposite sides of a joint

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7
Q

Synergist

A

Helps (aids) prime movers by adding extra force to the same movement, or by reducing undesirable/ unnecessary movements

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8
Q

Fixators

A

Synergistes that immobilise a bone to provide stability for the action of a prime mover

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9
Q

What are the three types of muscles

A
  • skeletal muscle
  • cardiac muscle
  • smooth muscle
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10
Q

What are fascicles?

A

Bundle of fibres

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11
Q

4 patterns of fascicles arrangement

A
  • circular
  • convergent
  • parallel
  • pennate
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12
Q

Circular

A
  • fascicles arranged in concentric rings
  • form sphincters
  • examples: orbiculaires oculi and orbiculaires oris
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13
Q

Convergent

A
  • broad origin
  • fascicles converge toward a single tendon for insertion
  • triangular or fan-shaped
  • example: pectoralis major
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14
Q

Parallel

A
  • fascicles arranged parallel to long axis of the muscle
  • examples: sartorius and rectus abdominis
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15
Q

Pennate

A
  • short fascicles that run obliquely and attach to central tendon
  • types: unipennate, bipennate, multipennate
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16
Q

Unipennate

A

Fascicles insert on ONLY one side of tendon (extensor digitorum Lingus)

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17
Q

Bipennate

A
  • fascicles insert on opposite sides of tendon
  • tendons lie in the centre of the muscle and muscle fibres pass to it from two sides
  • i.e. rectus femoris
18
Q

Multipennate

A
  • many fascicles together
  • e.g. deltoid muscle
19
Q

Shoulder Movement

A
  • Trapezius m. Superior fibres (elevation)
  • Trapezius m. Inferior fibres (depression)
20
Q

Back Movement

A
  • erector spinae (extension i.e bend spine back)
  • rectus abdominus (flexion i.e bend spine forwards)
21
Q

Chin Movement

A
  • temporalis (retrusion)
  • lateral pterygoid (protrusion)
22
Q

Whole leg (hip) movement

A
  • gluteus medius (abduction)
  • adductors (adduction)
  • gluteus maximus (extension)
  • iliopsoas (flexion)
23
Q

Whole arm (shoulder) movement (star jumps)

A
  • supraspinatus deltoid (first 30) + middle fibres of deltoid (abductions)
  • latissimus dorsi (adduction)
24
Q

Full arm (shoulder) movement (walking)

A
  • Deltoid posterior fibresand Latissimus dorsi (extension)
  • Deltoid anterior fibres (flexion)
25
Half hand (elbow) movement
- triceps brachii (extension) - Brachialis (flexion)
26
Hand (palm) movement (changing light bulb)
- biceps brachii (supination) - pronator teres (pronation)
27
Hand (wrist) movement (flicking wrist up and down)
- extensor digitorum (extension) - flexor carpi radialis and flexor carpi ulnaris (flexion)
28
Finger (knuckles) movement (sassy handbag)
- flexor digitorum superficialis (flexion) - extensor digitorum (extension)
29
Thumb movement
- flexor pollicis longus (flexion) - extensor pollicis longus (extension) - abductor pollicis (abduction) - adductor pollicis (adduction)
30
Half leg (knee) movement
- hamstring (flexion) - quadriceps femoris (extension)
31
Foot movement
- triceps surge (plantarflexion) - extensor digitorum longus (dorsiflexon) - fibularis longus (eversion) - tibiales anterior (inversion)
32
Actin-myosin crossbridge (muscle contraction)
1. Myosin binds actin - Myosin head attaches reversibly to high affinity active sites on the actin thin filament 2. Myosin 'power stroke' pulls actin filament, contracting sarcomere - ADP released, freeing ATP-binding site 3. ATP binding releases myosin from actin - Conformational change 4. ATP hydrolysis drives re-cocking of myosin to high energy state, but is not required for power stroke
33
Length-Tension Relationship
The amount of tension generated by a muscle depends on how stretched or shortened it is. - If overly shortened = weak contraction • thick filaments just butt against Z discs - If too stretched = weak contraction • minimal overlap between myosin and actin results in minimal cross- bridge formation - Optimum resting length produces greatest force when muscle contracts • The nervous system maintains muscle tone (partial contraction) to ensure that resting muscles are near this length
34
Force ????
- force is inversely related to velocity - maximum force = 0
35
Naming skeletal muscle categories (6)
- muscle location - muscle shape - muscle size - direction of muscle fibres - number of origins - muscle action
36
Naming skeletal muscle (muscle size)
- maximus/major = largest - minimus/minor = smallest - longus = longest - brevis = shortest
37
Naming skeletal muscle (direction of muscle fibres)
- rectus = straight - oblique - transversus = transverse
38
Naming skeletal muscle (Number of origins)
- bi = 2 - tri = 3 - quad = 4
39
Naming skeletal muscle (location of attachment)
- origin = first part of name - insertion = last part
40
Naming skeletal muscle (muscle action)
- flexor - extensor - opponents - abductor - adductor