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Muscular System. Characteristics of Muscles  All muscles have four common characteristics:  Contractibility  Excitability ( irritability)  Extensibility.

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Presentation on theme: "Muscular System. Characteristics of Muscles  All muscles have four common characteristics:  Contractibility  Excitability ( irritability)  Extensibility."— Presentation transcript:

1 Muscular System

2 Characteristics of Muscles  All muscles have four common characteristics:  Contractibility  Excitability ( irritability)  Extensibility  Elasticity Collectively, these 4 characteristics produce a veritable mechanical device capable of complex, intricate movements.

3 Contractibility  Quality possessed by NO other body tissue.  The muscle shortening or reducing the distance between the parts of its contents, or the space it surrounds.  Cardiac muscles contract; reduce the area in the heart chambers. Skeletal muscles contract; makes bones move.

4 Excitability/ Irritability  Characteristic of both muscle and nervous cells.  Ability to respond to certain stimuli by producing electrical signals: impulses or action potentials.

5 Extensibility  Ability to be stretched.  When we bend the forearm, the muscles on the back of it are extended or stretched.

6 Elasticity  Ability to return to original length when relaxing.

7 Heat and Energy  Muscles work= movement and heat  For muscles to work they need energy; the major source of energy is ATP ( adenosine triphosphate).  To make ATP you need O2, glucose, and other materials. Extra glucose is stored as glycogen.

8 Muscle stimulated ATP released Body heat produced, energy for muscle movement. Lactic acid build up begins.

9 Contraction of Skeletal Muscle  Movement occurs as a result of two events: Myoneural Stimulation and Contraction of muscle proteins.  Skeletal muscle MUST be stimulated by nerve impulses to contract.

10  A motor neuron (nerve cell) stimulates all of the skeletal muscles within a motor unit.  A motor unit is a motor neuron plus all the fibers it stimulates.  The junction between the motor neuron’s fiber (axon), which transmits the impulses, and the muscle cell’s sarcolemma is the neuromuscular junction.  Acetylcholine is released when nerve impulses reach the end of the axon.

11 Muscle Fatigue  Caused by an accumulation of lactic acid in the muscles.  During vigorous exercise blood will not carry enough O2 and muscles will contract anaerobically. This can cause lactic acid build up, which can impede muscular contraction; causing muscle fatigue and cramps.  After exercising, need to rest to take in O2 so lactic acid can change back to glucose and other materials.  Amount of O2 needed is Oxygen Debt.

12 Muscle Tone  Muscle Tone = slightly contracted and ready to pull.  Two types of contractions are isotonic and isometric.  Isotonic = muscles contract and shorten  Isometric = muscle tension increases but muscle does not shorten.

13  Atrophy – loss of muscle. Shrink from disuse. Not exercising or medical diseases.  Hypertrophy – Muscles become enlarged. Muscle fiber (cell) enlarges.

14 Naming of Skeletal Muscles  Use 7 criteria  Location  Size  Direction  Number of origins  Location of origins  Insertion  action

15 Principal Skeletal Muscles  Attached to and help move the skeleton.  They line the walls of the oral, abdominal, and pelvic cavities.  Also control the movement of the eyeballs, eyelids, lips, tongue, and skin.

16  656 muscles in the human body  327 antagonistic muscle pairs and two unpaired muscles  Unpaired muscles – orbicularis oris and diaphraghm

17  656 muscles can be divided and subdivided into:  Head Muscles  Neck Muscles  Trunk Muscles  Extremity Muscles

18 Head Muscles  Muscles of expression  Muscles of mastication  Muscles of the tongue  Muscles of the pharynx  Muscles of the soft palate

19 Neck Muscles  Muscles moving the head  Muscles moving the hyoid bone and the larynx  Muscles moving the upper ribs

20  Muscles of the head and neck control human facial expressions.  Muscles of mastication control the mandible.  Muscles that move the head cause extension, flexion, and rotation.

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22 Muscles of Facial Expression  Frontalis: located on either side of the forehead; raises eyebrows and wrinkles forehead  Depressor anguli oris: ring shaped muscle found around the mouth; compresses and closes the lips.  Platysma: broad, thin muscular sheet covering the side of the neck and lower jaw; draws corner of mouth down and back

23  Zygomaticus major: extends diagonally upward from corner of mouth; raises corner of mouth.  Nasalis: found over the nasal bones; closes and opens the nasal openings  Orbicularis oculi: Surrounds the eye orbit underlying the eyebrows; closes the eyelid and tightens the skin on the forehead.

24 Muscles of Mastication  Masseter: covers the lateral surface of the ramus (angle) of the mandible; closes the jaw  Temporalis: Located on the temporal fossa of the skull; raises the jaw, closes the mouth, and draws the jaw backward

25 Muscles of the Neck  Sternocleidomastoid (two heads): large muscles extending diagonally down sides of the neck; flexes head, rotates the head toward opposite side from muscle.

26 Muscles of the Trunk  The trunk muscles control breathing and the movements of the abdomen and the pelvis.

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29  External intercostals: found between the ribs; raises the ribs to help in breathing.  Diaphragm: a dome-shaped muscle separating the thoracic and abdominal cavaties; helps to control breathing.  Rectus abdominus: extends from the ribs to the pelvis; compresses the abdomen.  External oblique: anterior inferior edge of the last eight ribs; depresses ribs, flexes the spinal column, and compresses the abdominal cavity.  Internal oblique: found directly beneath the external oblique with fibers running in the opposite direction; depresses ribs, flexes the spinal column, and compresses the abdominal cavity.


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