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Muscles and Muscle Tissue Part B Prepared by Janice Meeking & W. Rose. Figures from Marieb & Hoehn 8th ed. Portions copyright Pearson Education Motor Unit: The Nerve-Muscle Functional Unit • Motor neuron and all (four to several hundred) muscle fibers it supplies • Small motor units in muscles that control fine movements (fingers, eyes) • Large motor units in large weight-bearing muscles (thighs, hips) • Muscle fibers from a motor unit are spread throughout muscle so that a single motor unit causes weak contraction of entire muscle • Motor units in a muscle usually contract asynchronously; helps prevent fatigue Spinal cord Motor Motor unit 1 unit 2 Axon terminals at neuromuscular junctions Nerve Motor neuron cell body Motor Muscle neuron axon Muscle fibers Axons of motor neurons extend from the spinal cord to the muscle. There each axon divides into a number of axon terminals that form neuromuscular junctions with muscle fibers scattered throughout the muscle. Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 9.13a Muscle Twitch • Response of a muscle to a single, brief threshold stimulus • Simplest contraction observable in the lab • Three phases: latent period, contraction, relaxation • Different muscles have different strengths and duration of twitches, due to variations in metabolic properties and enzymes Latent Period of period contraction Period of relaxation Single stimulus (a) Myogram showing the three phases of an isometric twitch Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 9.14a Latent period Extraocular muscle (lateral rectus) Gastrocnemius Soleus Single stimulus (b) Comparison of the relative duration of twitch responses of three muscles Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 9.14b Regulation of Muscle Force Required for proper control of skeletal movement Responses are graded by: 1. Changing the frequency of stimulation 2. Changing the number of motor units activated Response to Change in Stimulus Frequency • One stimulus results in a muscle twitch • With rapid stimuli, muscle can’t completely relax between each (Ca accumulates in cytoplasm: temporal summation) • Further increase in stimulus frequency unfused (incomplete) tetanus • Very fast stimuli : fused (complete) tetanus Single stimulus single twitch Contraction Relaxation Stimulus A single stimulus is delivered. The muscle contracts and relaxes Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 9.15a Low stimulation frequency unfused (incomplete) tetanus Partial relaxation Stimuli (b) If another stimulus is applied before the muscle relaxes completely, then more tension results. This is temporal (or wave) summation and results in unfused (or incomplete) tetanus. Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 9.15b High stimulation frequency fused (complete) tetanus Stimuli (c) At higher stimulus frequencies, there is no relaxation at all between stimuli. This is fused (complete) tetanus. Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 9.15c Response to Change in # of Active Motor Units • Size principle: motor units with larger and larger fibers are recruited as stimulus intensity increases • In the lab: Stimulus strength = amount of voltage or current applied to nerve • Threshold stimulus: stimulus strength at which the first observable muscle contraction occurs • Stronger stimulus activates more nerve fibers and motor units Stimulus strength Maximal stimulus Threshold stimulus Proportion of motor units excited Strength of muscle contraction Maximal contraction Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 9.16 Motor unit 1 Recruited (small fibers) Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Motor unit 2 recruited (medium fibers) Motor unit 3 recruited (large fibers) Figure 9.17 Muscle Tone • Constant, slightly contracted state of all muscles • Due to spinal reflexes that activate groups of motor units alternately in response to input from stretch receptors in muscles Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 9.18a Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 9.18b