2015 Muscle Notes From Class-2
2015 Muscle Notes From Class-2
Cardiac
Wall of heart
Not under conscious control
Striated
Smooth
Walls of most viscera, blood vessels, skin
Not under conscious control
Not striated
2
Insertion
Movable end, has the greatest motion when muscle
contracts
Pulled toward the origin when muscle contracts
Action
What the muscle doesevery movement
Some are flexors & decrease joint angles
Some are extensors, adductors, abductors, rotators,
etc.
Muscle Names
For their shape
Trapezius, rhomboideus
By the number of heads they have
Triceps brachii, biceps brachii
By location
Tibialis anterior, rectus abdominis
According to size
Teres major, teres minor
Superficial or deep?
Flexor digitorum superficialis, Flexor digitorum profundus
For their action
Adductors, flexors, extensor muscles, etc
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Muscle movement
Muscles do work by contracting
skeletal muscles come in
antagonistic pairs
flexor vs. extensor
contracting = shortening
move skeletal parts
tendons
connect bone to muscle
ligaments
connect bone to bone
Synergist
Muscle that helps the agonist
Antagonist
Opposes the agonist
EXAMPLES OF MUSCLE
GROUPS
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Abdominal muscles
Rectus abdominus
External oblique
Internal oblique
Transverse abdominis
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Quadriceps femoris
Muscle group of the anterior thigh
Rectus femoris
Vastus lateralis
Vastus medialis
Vastus intermedius
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Hamstrings
Muscles on the posterior thigh
Biceps femoris
Semitendinosus
Semimembranosus
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MUSCLE STRUCTURE
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9-3
perimysium: separates
muscle into fascicles
endomysium: separates
muscle fibers
fascicles: bundle of
muscle fibers
myofibrils
thick and thin filaments
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Transverse tubules
(T-tubules)
multi-nucleated
Mitochondrion
Interacting proteins
thin filaments
braided strands
actin
tropomyosin
troponin
thick filaments
myosin
Muscle at rest
Interacting proteins
at rest, troponin molecules hold tropomyosin fibers so
that they cover the myosin-binding sites on actin
troponin has Ca2+ binding sites
sarcomere
sarcomere
Sarcomere
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ACTIN
MYOSIN
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Myofilaments
Thin Filaments
Made of actin
Have troponin &
tropomyosin
Tropomyosin held
together by troponin
molecule = a troponin
tropomyosin complex
Thick Filaments
Made of myosin
Cross bridge
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MUSCLE CONTRACTION
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Neuromuscular Junction
Motor Unit
single motor neuron
all muscle fibers controlled by a single motor neuron
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Motor Neurons
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exposes myosin-binding
sites on actin
ATP
ATP
Relaxation
Acetylcholinesterase on motor end plate
decomposes acetylcholine prevents nerve
impulse from stimulating muscle fiber
Ca2+ pump moves Ca2+ back into sarcoplasmic
reticulum, decreasing Ca2+ concentration
Cross-bridge links break
Tropomyosin rolls back into its groove and muscle
relaxes
Inhibitors in insecticides cause build up of Ach twitching
Nerve gas stimulates enzyme so muscles dont 39
contract
2
3
ATP
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4
ATP
ATP
Muscle limits
Muscle fatigue
lack of sugar
lack of ATP to restore Ca2+ gradient
low O2
lactic acid drops pH which
interferes with protein function
synaptic fatigue
loss of acetylcholine
Muscle cramps
build up of lactic acid
ATP depletion
ion imbalance
massage or stretching
increases circulation
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Cross-bridge Cycling
actin and myosin
cross-bridge bind
myosin crossbridge pulls actin
ADP and phosphate
released from myosin
new ATP binds to
myosin
linkage between actin
and myosin cross-bridge
break
ATP splits
myosin cross-bridge goes back
to original position
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Heat Production
by-product of cellular respiration
muscle cells are major source of body heat
blood transports heat throughout body
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Muscular Responses
Threshold Stimulus
minimal neural strength required to cause
contraction
Recording a Muscle
Contraction
twitch
latent period
period of contraction
period of relaxation
refractory period
all-or-none response
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Summation
process by which individual twitches combine
produces sustained contractions
can lead to tetanic contractions
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Sustained Contractions
smaller motor units recruited first
larger motor units recruited later
produces smooth movements
muscle tone continuous state of partial contraction
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Types of Contractions
isotonic muscle contracts and
changes length
eccentric lengthening
contraction
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Botox
Bacteria Clostridium botulinum toxin
blocks release of acetylcholine
botulism can be fatal
muscle
Rigor mortis
So why are dead people stiffs?
no life, no breathing
no breathing, no O2
no O2, no aerobic respiration
no aerobic respiration, no ATP
2+ pumps
no ATP, no Ca
2+ stays in muscle cytoplasm
Ca
muscle fibers continually
contract
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Creatine Phosphate
However.
Amount of creatine &
ATP in skeletal
muscle is not enough
to support max.
activity more than 10
sec.
Somuscle cells in
active muscle us CR
of glucose to make
ATP
Muscle usually stores
glucose as glycogen
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In cytoplasm
Anaerobic
Splits sugar
Release few ATP
Continues into
Mitochondria w/citric
acid cycle & ETC to
make many ATP
Blood carries O to
support rxns of CR
RBCs bound to
hemoglobin
Contains myoglobin
Big O attraction
Can store O, reducing
requirement for
continual blood supply
Blood flow usually
decreases in high
activity
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Oxygen Debt
At rest or moderate activity cardio & resp
systems supply enough O to support CR
Buthighly active.not enough O to
sustain rxns of CR
Anaerobic threshold = lactic acid threshold
Glucose pyruvic acid lactic acid
Lactic acid diffuses out muscles to blood to
liver
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Oxygen debt
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Get no to little
exercise
Breast meat of turkey
or chicken
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Cardiac Muscle
only in the heart
muscle fibers joined together by intercalated discs
fibers branch
network of fibers contracts as a unit
self-exciting and rhythmic
longer refractory period than skeletal muscle
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Life-Span Changes
Myoglobin, ATP, and creatine phosphate
decline.
By age 80, half the muscle mass has
atrophied.
Adipose cells and CT replace muscle tissue.
Exercise helps maintain muscle mass and
function.
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