* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Location
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Muscular and Nervous Tissue Chapter 4.3 Human Anatomy & Physiology Muscular Tissue • Function • Contraction • Attachment by tendons to bones for movement • Movement: Voluntary and involuntary Muscular Tissue • Appearance – striated (striped) – Alternating light and dark bands • Location – Usually attached to skeleton • Each cell has a nucleus that is centrally located Types of Muscular Tissue • Types A. Skeletal B. Smooth C. Cardiac Characteristics of Skeletal Muscle • Appearance: striated • Location: Attached primarily to bones • Control: Voluntary (conscious) • Contracts quickly, tires easily (fatigable) • Allows for wide range of forces to be generated Skeletal Muscle Tissue - 400X Smooth Muscle • Appearance: spindleshaped • Location: wall of hollow organs – example: Intestines, urinary bladder, ureters, urinary bladder, blood vessels • Control: Involuntary • Contracts rhythmically and quickly, tires easily (fatigable) • Allows for wide range of forces to be generated Smooth Muscle Smooth Muscle Tissue - 400X Cardiac Muscle • Has features of both skeletal and smooth muscle - Strong contractions and striated appearance is similar to skeletal muscle - Involuntary control and rhythmic contraction is similar to smooth muscle • Appearance: striated and branched (like skeletal muscle) • Location: heart • Function: contraction of heart pumps blood and causes the heartbeat • Control: Involuntary (like smooth muscle) Cardiac Muscle Tissue - 400X Nervous Tissue • The ultimate control of all the organ systems is done by the nervous system. – The nervous system controls and coordinates functions throughout the body and responds to internal and external stimuli. Nervous Tissue • Found: brain, spinal cord, has specialized cells • The cells that transmit these impulses are called neurons. Structure of a Neuron Nucleus Dendrites Axon terminals Cell body Myelin sheath Nodes Axon Neuron Structure • The largest part of a typical neuron is the cell body. • It contains the nucleus and much of the cytoplasm. Neuron Structure • Dendrites extend from the cell body and carry impulses from the environment toward the cell body. Neuron Structure • The axon is the long fiber that carries impulses away from the cell body. Neuron Structure • The axon is sometimes surrounded by an insulating membrane called the myelin sheath. Neuron Structure There are gaps in the myelin sheath, called nodes, where the membrane is exposed. • Impulses jump from one node to the next.