Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Muscular system Anatomy & Physiology.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Muscular system Anatomy & Physiology."— Presentation transcript:

1 Muscular system Anatomy & Physiology

2 Functions Movement, pumping/transport Breathing Posture
Produce heat, regulate body temperature Protection,(of organs, stabilize joints, etc.)

3

4 Muscle Types Skeletal- voluntary (bones, face), over 400, long cells, many nuclei, striated Cardiac- involuntary (heart and blood vessels), strongest, 1 nuclei per cell, some striations with gap junctions Smooth- involuntary (intestines, internal organs), slow and smooth, 1 nuclei per cell, no striations

5

6 Muscle Contraction All or None!
Opposites contract! Muscles work in pairs Bicep bends at the elbow (relaxed) → tricep straightens the arm (contracted) muscle contraction animation video

7 Sarcomere = contractile unit

8 Muscle contraction Actin (thin) filaments, with myosin, are responsible for cell movements  Myosin (thick) “molecular motor”—a protein that converts chemical energy (ATP) to mechanical energy, (force and movement) Need Ca++ ions AND ATP to contract Acetylcholine

9

10 Types of Muscles Slow Twitch- red fibers, oxygen storage, can build over time, used for aerobic exercise, long distance running Fast Twitch- white fibers, used for short burst of energy, born with a certain amount, sprinters Intermediate- most common, mixture of red and white

11 Naming Muscles Location Vastus lateralis/medialis Shape Deltoid
Size Gluteus maximus Direction of fibers Oblique, rectus abdominus or femoris Number of origins Triceps, biceps Location of attachments Sternocleidomastoid Action Adductors/abductors

12 Muscles comprise approx. 45% of our body weight
600+ muscles in the body Approx. 640 Muscles comprise approx. 45% of our body weight Smallest muscle = stapedius in ear Largest muscle = gluteus maximus Most active muscles are in the eye Over 100,000 movements per day


Download ppt "Muscular system Anatomy & Physiology."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google