Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Bell Ringer 1. What is the best way to build muscle WITHOUT using perfomance enhancing drugs? 2. Would you consider supplements such as Creatine to be a performance enhancing drug? Why or why not? The Muscular System A&P Fall 2016 I. Overview of Muscle Tissues A. Muscle Types 1. Skeletal Muscle a. Muscle fibers are packaged together to form whole muscles b. Muscles are striated (have stripes) c. Controlled voluntarily 2. Smooth Muscle a. Found in walls of hollow organs i. Ex. Stomach, bladder, etc b. Has no striations c. Involuntary control 3. Cardiac Muscle a. Found only in the heart b. Has striations c. Involuntary control B. Skeletal Muscle Functions 1. Producing Movement a. mobility of the body as a whole 2. Maintaining posture and body position a. continual tiny adjustments to maintain standing or sitting posture 3. Stabilizing Joints a. muscle tendons reinforce joints where bones don’t fit together well i. Ex. Shoulder joint 4. Generating Heat a. energy used for muscle activity creates heat 5. Protection a. covers internal organs II. Microscopic Anatomy of Skeletal Muscle A. Myofibrils 1. Ribbon-like organelles 2. Made of chains of sacromeres a. Myofilaments are substructures that produce light and dark banding patterns i. Thick filaments made of myosin protein ii. Thin filaments made of actin protein 3. Broken into many parts a. Z disc i. Where sacromeres join together b. Light I band i. Space where no myosin protein is present c. Dark A band i. Space where myosin protein is present d. H zone i. Space where mysoin IS present, but Actin is absent e. M line i. Located within the H zone ii. Protein rods that hold adjacent myosin filaments together B. Muscle Fibers (Cells) 1. Have many ocal nuclei 2. Contain special organelles a. Myofibrils i. Many in each cell ii. Take up most of the space in the cytoplasm b. Sarcoplasmic reticulum i. Special ER that surrounds every myofibril 3. Plasma membrane is called the sarcolemma a. Means “Muscle Husk” 4. Each cell enclosed in Endomysium a. A delicate connective tissue sheath C. Fascicle 1. Formed by many muscle fibers bundled together 2. Surrounded by the Perimysium a. Another fibrous membrane b. Coarser and stronger than the Endomysium D. Muscle Organ 1. Formed by many Fascicles bundled together 2. Surrounded by the Epimysium a. Toughest membrane of all b. Also form tendons at the end of muscles III. Skeletal Muscle Activity A. Stimulation & Contraction of a Single Muscle Cell 1. The Nerve Stimulus and the Action Potential a. Motor Unit i. Made of one neuron and multiple muscle cells ii. The nerve fiber branches into multiple axon terminals b. Structure of Neuromuscular Junctions i. Space between a neuron and muscle cell ii. Filled with vesicles that contain acetylcholine (ACh) iii. Acetylcholine is a neurotransmitter c. Action of neuromuscular junctions i. Action potential reaches axon terminal of a motor neuron ii. Calcium (Ca2+) channels open and Ca2+ enters the axon terminal iii. Ca2+ entry causes some synaptic vesicles to release their contents (ACh) by exocytosis vi. Enzyme acetylcholinesterase breaks down Ach in the synaptic cleft, ending the process v. ACh binds and channels open that allow simultaneous passage of Na+ into the fiber and K+ out of the fiber (More Na+ moves in than K+ moves out). The passage of these ions leads to an action potential iv. ACh diffuses across the synaptic cleft and binds to receptors in the sarcolemma 2. The Sliding Filament Theory a. Action potential within the sarcolemma causes calcium ions to be released into the cytoplasm i. Ca2+ comes from the sarcoplasmic reticulum b. Release of Ca2+ triggers the binding of myosin to actin c. Myosin heads “walk” along actin filaments, causing actin proteins to slide closer together i. Neither filaments actually shorten, they just slide past one another B. Contraction of Skeletal Muscle as a whole 1. Graded Responses a. The “all-or-none” rule applies to fibers i. means a fiber will always contract to its fullest extent when stimulated ii. Does NOT apply to the whole muscle b. Whole muscle can react with different degrees of shortening in 2 ways i. change the frequency of muscle stimulation ii. Change the number of fibers being stimulated at one time 2. Muscle Response to rapid stimulation a. Complete Tetanus i. muscle contractions are completely smooth and sustained ii. No evidence of relaxation 3. Muscle Fatigue and Oxygen Deficit a. Muscle fatigue occurs when muscles are exercised strenuously i. Muscles are still being stimulated but are unable to contract b. Oxygen deficit most likely cause i. body is unable to take oxygen in fast enough ii. Muscles do not get the amount needed to contract iii. Lactic acid builds up as a result 4. Types of Muscle Contraction a. Isotonic i. the muscle shortens during contraction ii. Ex. Bending your knee b. Isometric i. the muscle does NOT shorten ii. Ex. Straining to lift a heavy object 5. Muscle Tone a. Some muscle fibers are still contracting at all times i. allows muscle to remain firm and healthy ii. Exercise can increase muscle tone b. Endurance exercises i. results in stronger, more flexible muscles that resist fatigue ii. Ex. Jogging or biking c. Resistance exercises i. increases muscle strength and size ii. Ex. Forcing a muscle to contract