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3 November 2010 Today: Finish Chapter 9 Muscle Physiology Chapter 10 Control of Movement Lab this week: Human Muscle Physiology Instruction on Website. Soon: Chapter 12: Cardiovascular Physiology S1 Response to training • Resistance training Type II change enzyme profiles: II A to II B Type II add more actin and myosin Type II increase cross-sectional area (hypertrophy) • Endurance training – Type I increases vascularity – Type I increase number of mitochondria End of material for Test # 2 S2 Begin material for Test # 3 Chapter 9 B Properties of Smooth Muscle (Cardiac muscle covered later) How does smooth muscle differ from skeletal muscle? (innervation, membrane potentials, excitation-contraction coupling, twitch duration, fatigue, etc. (Table 9-6 p.292) What are the features of membrane potential of smooth muscle? (pacemakers and slow waves) What are the differences between single-unit and multi-unit smooth muscle? (location, spread of excitation) Who cares about smooth muscles? Migraineurs! S4 Latchbridge =latch state S3 Figure 9.34 from SR and influx during Action Potential or graded potential Graded potentials result in graded contractions Slow twitch of SM due to slow action of myosin ATPase. Lack troponin Special situation: Dephosphorylation & latch bridge S5 Comparison: How does tension diminish? Thank God for latch state! Crucial for long-term tension of sphincters. S6 Slow waves and pacemaker potentials Intestinal tract, uterus, small diameter blood vessels Large airways of lungs, large arteries, ciliary muscle Often with pacemaker cells Control of membrane potential by neurotransmitters, hormones, local factors for some smooth muscles (02, NO, pH, stretch, vasodilators ….) S7 Know this table Fig. 09.06 S8 Chapter 10: Control of somatic motor systems Riding a bike, playing piano, swinging a bat or golf club…. S9 Fig. 10.10a S 10 Somatatopy in Primary Motor Cortex S 11 Fig. 10.02 Formerly called “basal ganglia”, consist of caudate, putatmen, and globus pallidus Decision to move S 12 Fig. 10.01 Initiates motor command Coordinates secondary movements Corticospinal and corticobulbar tracts Balance and complex learned movements Pathways? Examples of motor disorders: Huntington’s Disease and Cerebellar Disorder Reflex S 13 Local control • Muscle spindle – Stretch receptor – Intrafusal muscle fiber • What is their role? • The stretch reflex… – Follow the reflex arc – Be able to differentiate function of afferent fibers, alpha motor neurons, and gamma motor neurons Spindle Afferent S 14 Fig. 10.05ab S 15 Fig. 10.05c Co-activation of alpha and gamma motoneurons insures that the stretch of muscle can be detected regardless of the initial length or state of contraction of that muscle. S 16 Fig. 10.06 Stretch reflex is monosynaptic Most common example: patellar reflex = “knee jerk reflex” Proprioception pathway via dorsal column-medial lemniscus pathway S 17 Stretch Reflex Monosynpatic excitation of motoneurons of that muscle and synergistic muscles and polysynaptic inhibition of motoneurons to antagonistic muscles. Recall frog reflex lab and existence of spinal reflexes in single-pithed frogs. Also, example Christopher Reeve and patellar reflex. S 18 Fig. 10.07 S 19 Golgi tendon organs involved in a reflex to oppose excessive muscle tension. Not monosynaptic. Not shown: ascending axons in dorsal column-medial lemniscus tract. S 20 Joint angle detectors and cutaneous mechanoreceptors contribute to sense of body position (proproiception.) S 21 Pyramidal tract Fig. 10.12 Corticospinal tract Corticobulbar tract Fine motor control, esp. of extremeties Extra-Pyramidal tracts Reticulospinal tract Vestibulospinal tract Originate in brainstem, more involved with posture and equilibrium Not monosynaptic! S 22 Who Cares? Video of Huntington’s Chorea Video of Cerebellar Dysfunction Video of Trampoline Championship