Top Banner
Muscle Tissue 1 Muscle types and functional characteristics Levels of organization and microanatomy of muscle
31

Muscle tissue 1

May 21, 2015

Download

Education

Types of muscle and functional characteristics of muscle. Levels of organization of muscle, fascicles, myofibrils, and myofibers. Microanatomy and functional unit of contraction, the sarcomere. Used as basis for lecture to high school science students
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Muscle tissue 1

Muscle Tissue 1

Muscle types and functional characteristicsLevels of organization and microanatomy of muscle

Page 2: Muscle tissue 1

The basicsMuscles are attached to bonesMuscles contract (get shorter) and move bonesMuscles comprise 40-50% of body massMyology

Study of muscle anatomy and physiology

Myo- Mys- Sarco- = prefixes that reference muscle

Page 3: Muscle tissue 1

Muscle functional characteristicsExcitable / excitability

ability to respond to stimuli

Contractile / -ilityability to shorten; initiated by nerve signal (action potential)

Extensible / -ilityability to stretch; lengthen

Elastic / -icityability to return to original length

Page 4: Muscle tissue 1

Types of muscleSkeletal

Attached to bones, striated, voluntary

CardiacForms heart, striated, involuntary

SmoothWalls of blood vessels, stomach intestines, hair follicles, non-striated, involuntary

Page 5: Muscle tissue 1

Muscle FunctionsMotion

contraction moves bones; bodyblood flowperistalsis (squeezing of intestines)gall and urinary bladder contraction

Posture maintenance / joint stabilization

Thermoregulationcontraction results in heat energy release

Page 6: Muscle tissue 1
Page 7: Muscle tissue 1
Page 8: Muscle tissue 1
Page 9: Muscle tissue 1

Skeletal muscle contraction(microanatomical TEM)

Page 10: Muscle tissue 1
Page 11: Muscle tissue 1
Page 12: Muscle tissue 1
Page 13: Muscle tissue 1

Skeletal muscle tissue organization

Page 14: Muscle tissue 1
Page 15: Muscle tissue 1

ConnectionsTendons

Dense connective tissue continuous with deep fascia, connect muscles to periosteum

AponeurosesBroad flat tendon attachment to bone, or to different muscle, or skin

Page 16: Muscle tissue 1
Page 17: Muscle tissue 1
Page 18: Muscle tissue 1
Page 19: Muscle tissue 1
Page 20: Muscle tissue 1

Microanatomy

Page 21: Muscle tissue 1
Page 22: Muscle tissue 1
Page 23: Muscle tissue 1
Page 24: Muscle tissue 1
Page 25: Muscle tissue 1
Page 26: Muscle tissue 1
Page 27: Muscle tissue 1

Muscle Contraction RequirementsNerve impulse

A nerve penetrates every muscleSynaptic bulb / neuromuscular junction = muscle connection with nerve cell

BloodSupplies energy, nutrients, oxygenRemoval of waste and heatEach muscle fiber is in contact with capillaries

Page 28: Muscle tissue 1
Page 29: Muscle tissue 1
Page 30: Muscle tissue 1
Page 31: Muscle tissue 1