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THE MUSCULAR SYSTEM TYPES OF MUSCLE • 1. Cardiac- found only in the heart; striated, involuntary. Contracts forcing blood to be pumped by the heart. Unique in the fact it normally does not fatigue. • Smooth- (visceral) found in the walls of hollow organs. Involuntary, non-striated. Also found in blood vessels (arteries) and in sphincter muscles which help control blood pressure, circulation, heat loss, and digestion. • Skeletal Muscle- striated, voluntary; contraction causes movement of the skeleton with the joints acting as a fulcrum and the bones as levers. Also creates body heat by giving off heat created by contraction and the consumption of ATP. Types of muscle fibers Characteristics of Skeletal Muscle • 1. Irritability-(excitability) ability to react to a stimulus • 2. Contractility- ability to shorten when stimulated • 3. Extensibility- ability to stretch • 4. Elasticity- ability to return to a normal length after stretching Skeletal Muscle Attachments • All muscles are encased by connective tissue sheath and connective tissue attachments at each end of the muscle. • Fascia- each individual muscle is encased by the fibrous connective tissue sleeve. • Tendon-FCT band that attaches muscle to the bone. Origin- the attachment with the least or no movement Insertion- the attachment that moves the most on contraction • Aponeurosis- broad fibrous sheet of connective tissue that attaches a muscle to another band of muscle. Types of connective tissue attachments for muscles Origin and Insertion of the biceps brachii Individual Muscle C. T. coverings • Epimysium- covers the whole muscle • Perimysium-surrounds and separates a large group of fibers of a muscle called a fasiculus. • Endomysium-surrounds each individual muscle fiber MUSCLE STRUCTURE • Each muscle cell is called a fiber. Very large cell, multinucleated. • Sarcolemma- muscle cell membrane • Sarcoplasm- cytoplasm of a muscle cell • Each fiber is composed of smaller fibers called myofibrils. • Myofibrils are composed of even smaller fibrous proteins called Actin and Myosin these are called myofilaments. • These proteins are arranged in repeating units called the SARCOMERE. skeletal muscle. The contractile or functional unit of MUSCLE MICROANATOMY THE SLIDING FILAMENT THEORY • Proposed in the 1950’s by T. J. Huxley, he explained that actin filaments are pulled over myosin filaments by cross-bridges which form the between the proteins. He later received the Nobel Prize for his theory. • • • • • When the muscle fiber is stimulated to contract: 1. The I-band disappears 2. A-band remains unchanged 3. M or H zone disappears 4. Z-lines are drawn closer together. • Each muscle fiber is made up of thousands and thousands of sarcomeres and when each of these multitudes of sarcomeres each shorten it results in the whole muscle shortening or as we call it contracting. Myosin is 2 protein strands wrapped around one another in which globular proteins project. • globular proteins on myosin react with actin forming cross-bridges • This reaction generates the force necessary to shorten myofibrils Actin is a double strand twisted into a helix. It has ADP molecules on its surface and this is what forms the crossbridges with myosin. THE NEUROMUSCULAR JUNTION • Each muscle fiber is connected to a nerve cell fiber called a motor neuron. • The site where the nerve fiber and muscle fiber join is called the neuromuscular junction. • The muscle fiber membrane is specialized to form a motor end plate. • Muscle contraction is stimulated by the secretion of acetylcholine at the neuromuscular junction. Acetylcholine is a neurotrasmitter. • Motor unit = motor neuron + muscle fibers controlled by it. Neuromuscular junction Stimulus for Muscle Contraction • Acetylcholine secreted at the NMJ stimulates muscle contraction by causing depolarization of the myofibril. • Ca++ ions have to be present for muscle contraction to occur. • Ca++ ions are stored in the sarcoplasmic reticulum which surrounds each myofibril. • Acetylcholine stimulates the release of Ca++ ions which in turn stimulates shortening of the sarcomeres causing contraction of the muscle fiber. Energy Sources for Contraction • Like all cells of the body muscle ultimately relies on ATP -----ADP to supply energy for contraction • Glycogen is stored in muscles and the liver • Glycogen ------- glucose which then enters glycolysis • Pyruvic acid, the end product of glycolysis, when oxygen is present , enters the Kreb’s cycle ATP------- ADP • Myoglobin, a protein in muscle stores oxygen. • During periods of intense activity, oxygen cannot be supplied to muscle fibers fast enough and not enough ATP can be supplied by oxidative metabolism. • Without enough oxygen pyruvic acid formed from glycolysis is then converted to lactic acid which diffuses out of the muscle fibers and into the blood stream. • Muscles store a compound called creatine phosphate this provides a means of reforming ATP rapidly. • An oxygen debt is built up during periods of intense muscular activity when nonoxidative sources of ATP (glycolysis and creatine phosphate) are used to support muscle contraction. • This debt is paid back by an elevated rate of respiration during the period following exercise. • The elevated rate of respiration provides oxygen required to produce ATP for the resynthesis of creatine phosphate and to convert lactic acid back to glucose and glycogen. • During exercise these reactions take place: glucose---------lactic acid + ATP creatine phosphate-------- creatine + phosphate + energy • After exercise: ADP + P-------- ATP creatine + phosphate------- creatine phosphate 1/5 lactic acid + oxygen ------- carbon dioxide + water 4/5 lactic acid + ATP ------ glucose Muscle Fatigue • Muscle fatigue results in the loss in the ability to contract the muscle. • Caused by: blood supply interruption exhaustion of acetylcholine lactic acid build up (pH changes) lack of ATP, K+, Na+, or Ca++ Muscle Response Muscle response is measured on a kymograph producing a myogram. • All or None Law- A muscle fiber will contract fully or not at all. • Threshold stimulus- the weakest stimulus that will elicit a response. (contraction of a muscle fiber) • Subthreshold stimuli can be additive and can stimulate a contraction this is called summation. Latent period .01sec Contraction phase .04sec Relaxation phase .05sec Frog gastrocnemius in kymograph Types of Muscle Contractions • Concentric – contraction in which the muscle shortens • Eccentric- contraction of the muscle when the muscle is stretched. • Isometric –contraction in which there is no movement. • Isotonic-contraction which produces movement, resistance is variable (due to gravity and lever action of the skeleton) • Isokinetic-contraction with movement, resistance will vary depending on the force applied. (machines only) • Hypertrophy- muscle enlargement due to increase in fiber size • Atrophy-muscle shrinkage due to disuse or paralysis or nerve impairment. • Tetany (tetanus) a sustained contraction resulting from too many stimuli, will last until oxidation and removal of lactic acid occurs within the muscle. • Tonus (tone) some muscle fibers will be contracted while others remain relaxed. Then other muscle fibers will contract while others are relaxed. Antagonistic Pairs opposite pairs of muscles. • Agonist (prime mover) muscle contracting producing movement • Antagonist opposite muscle being stretched due to the contraction of the agonist. • Examples biceps-triceps, quadriceps-hamstring Diseases and Disorders of the Muscular System • Myasthenia gravis-severe muscle fatigue, drooping eyelids, double vision due to low acetylcholine production or acetylcholine receptors malfunction. • Muscle strain- stretching or tearing of muscle fibers or the tendons which connect them. 1st degree, 2nd degree, 3rd degree Structural and Functional Characteristics of the 3 Types of Skeletal Muscle Fibers Speed of Cont. Enzyme act. Pathway for ATP syn Myoglobin content Glycogen stores Recruitment Rate of fatigue Slow oxidative Slow Slow aerobic high low 1st slow Activites best suited endurance Color Fiber diameter Mitochondria Capillaries red small many many Fast oxidative fast fast both high intermed. 2nd intermed. Fast glycolytic fast fast anaerobic low high 3rd fast intermed intense red to pink intermed many many white large few few Muscle fiber comparison X-sect.