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Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System
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Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Dec 28, 2015

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Doris Tyler
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Page 1: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Anatomy

Chapter 6 – The Muscular System

Page 2: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Overview of Muscle Tissues

Page 3: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.
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Connective tissue wrappings of skeletal muscle

Muscle Functions:1. Producing movement2. Maintaining posture3. Stabilizing joints4. Generating heat

Page 5: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Microscopic Anatomy of a skeletal muscle fiber (cell)

The major role of this elaborate system is to store calcium and to release it on demand when the muscle fiber is stimulated to contract.

Page 6: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Motor Units consist of a motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it activates.

Photomicrograph of a portion of a motor unit.

Page 7: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Schwann cell

Axon hillock

Neuromuscular junction (synaptic cleft)

Typical Nerve Cell - Neuron

Muscle cells have two special functions: 1) irritability – the ability to receive and respond to a stimulus 2) contractility – the ability to shorten (forcibly) when an adequate stimulus is received

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The neuromuscular junction:

Acetylcholine – neurotransmitter that stimulates skeletal muscle cells

Page 9: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Contraction of a Skeletal Muscle as a Whole

• Graded response - different degrees of shortening; involves cells with an “all-or-none” response; (1) changing frequency of muscle stimulation, (2) changing the number of muscle cells being stimulated.

• Muscle twitch – single, brief, jerky contraction; not normal operation• Complete tetanus – fused muscle contraction; stimulation so rapid, no evidence of relaxation, contractions are smooth and sustained• Incomplete tetanus – unfused; muscle motion not completely smooth• How forcefully a muscle contracts depends on how many cells are being stimulated; the hand that caresses, can also deliver a stinging slap

Page 10: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Providing Energy for Muscle Contraction: ATP molecules are hydrolyzed to release the needed energy. Muscles store very limited supplies of ATP – 4 to 6 seconds worth. ATP is the only energy source that can be used directly to power muscle activity.

Direct Phosphorylation Aerobic Respiration Anaerobic Respiration

Page 11: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Types of Muscle Contractions: Isotonic – “same tone” or tension; muscle shortens, movement

occurs (knee bend, smiling). Isometric – muscles do not shorten; “skidding you heels”,

pushing against the wall, wall sits.

Muscle fatigue and oxygen debt – exercising for prolonged times depletes ATP in the muscle; cannot be contracted even with stimulation; true muscle fatigue results in the muscle quitting, rarely occurs because most of us stop long before it happens – marathon runners.

Muscle tone – muscle remains firm, healthy, ready for action; continuous partial contractions. Resistance – isometric exercises, muscles pitted against immovable object.

Exercise – “Use it or lose it”; strength, stamina, endurance.

Page 12: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Types of Muscle movements: Every one of the 600 muscles in the body is attached to a bone or connective tissue structure, at no less than two points.

• Origin – attached to the immovable or less movable bone • Insertion – attached to the movable bone, moves toward the origin

Body movement occurs when muscles contract across joints.

Muscle attachments – when a skeletal muscle contracts, its insertion moves toward its origin.

Page 13: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.
Page 14: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Types of Body Movements:Sagittal Plane Opposite of flexion Greater than 180*

Page 15: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Rotation is movement of a bone around its longitudinal axis. Common in ball-and-socket joints. (Atlas and dens of axis)

Page 16: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Abduction is moving limb away from the midline of the body. Adduction is moving limb toward midline of body.

Circumduction – combination of flexion, extension, abduction, adduction.

Page 17: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.
Page 18: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Interactions of Skeletal Muscles in the Body: Muscles cannot push – they only pull as they contract.

Movement is most often the result of the activity of two or more muscles acting together or against each other.

o Prime mover – the muscle with the major responsibility for causing a particular movement (biceps)

o Antagonist – muscle that oppose or reverse a movement (triceps)

o Synergist – help prime movers by producing the same movement or reducing undesirable movements (stabilizers)

o Fixators – specialized synergists – stabilize the origin of prime movers so all tension can be used to move the insertion bone

Page 19: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Naming Skeletal Muscles: Direction of muscles – reference to imaginary line; rectus – straight, oblique – running at an angle

Relative size – gluteus maximus – Large; gluteus minimus – small, longus – long

Location of muscle – bone associated with, frontalis, temporalis, occipitalis

Number of origins – biceps, triceps, quadriceps

location of the muscles origin and insertion – sternocleidomastoid

Shape of muscle – deltoid is triangular, trapezius

Action of muscle – adductor magus

Page 20: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Arrangement of the fascicles:• Circular – concentric circles, external body openings that close by contracting; sphincters; orbicularis oris

• Convergent - fascicles converge toward single insertion tendon; fan-shaped; pectoralis major

• Parallel – length of fascicles run parallel to the long axis; strap-like; sartorius

• Fusiform - spindle-shaped with expanded midsection; biceps brachii

• Pinnate - feather pattern; unipennate , bipennate, multipennate

Page 21: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Gross Anatomy of skeletal muscles: Head and Neck

Facial muscles – inserted into soft tissues; facial expressions.

Chewing muscles –mastication of food, elevating the mandible

Neck muscles – move the head and shoulder girdle

Page 22: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Trunk muscles: move vertebral column; anterior thorax muscles; abdominal walls

Anterior muscles:

Muscles of the upper limb:

Page 23: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Posterior muscles:

Page 24: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Muscles of the lower limb: cause movement of the hip, knee, and foot

Muscles causing movement at the hip:

Muscles causing movement at the knee joint:

Page 25: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Muscles causing movement at the ankle and foot:

Page 26: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Several large, bulky, muscles are chosen as injection sites, when relatively small amounts of medicine must be given intramuscularly.

Page 27: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Major superficial muscle of the anterior surface of the body:

Page 28: Anatomy Chapter 6 – The Muscular System. Overview of Muscle Tissues.

Major superficial muscles of the posterior surface of the body:

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