1/48
Looks like no tags are added yet.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced |
---|
No study sessions yet.
what is skeletal muscle innervated by?
motoneurons of somatic nervous system
what is excitation-contraction coupling?
Process by which muscle AP causes rise of intracellular Ca2+ and actin-myosin interaction
describe the structure of myofibrils
organised bundles of thick and thin filaments which generate contraction
what are Ca2+ needed in muscle contraction?
to allow interaction between actin and myosin
what is EC coupling?
when muscle action potentials (excitation) triggers a contraction (force generation and or muscle shortening)
what do triads compose of?
a segment of T-tubule between 2 sacs of SR
what is the role of triads?
Site of physical and functional contact between T-tubule and SR membranes
what is the sarcolemma?
muscle cell membrane
list the steps involved in EC coupling
how does Ca2+ go from SR to thin filamment?
diffusion
what happens to Ca2+ upon relaxation?
pumped back into SR
DHP receptor changes shape in response to ....?
AP
what is DHP receptor?
a voltage sensor
what causes a change of shape in RyR?
physical contact between DHP and RyR molecules
what allows Ca2+ to exit SR and interact to myofilaments?
DHP receptor changes shape leads to RyR changing shape
what is steric blocking?
mechanism is what enables Ca2+ to operate the on-off switch
what is the role of t-tubules in muscle contraction?
propagates APs deep into fibre
what are the 3 membrane systems?
sarcolemma, t-tubules, SR
what is a twitch?
a contraction that occurs in response to a single stimulus (AP)
what does the speed of a twitch depend on?
the type of fibre
what do fast fibres shorten quicker?
because their myosin has a faster ATPase and therefore they can form more cross bridges per second
what is the genetic cause of MH (Malignant hyperthermia/hyperpyrexia)
defective RyR or DHPR gene
what is the problem with having a defective RyR or DHPR gene?
excessive Ca release when patients are exposed to gases like halothane
what are effects of generaliased muscle contractions?
large rises of body temp, lactate release, acidosis, and release of K from muscle raising blood potassium
slow (red) twitch fibres are what type?
I
fast (white) twitch fibres are what type?
II
comment on the Fatigue Resistance of type 1 muscle fibres
high resistance
comment on the Fatigue Resistance of type 2 muscle fibres
moderate - low resistance
which type of twitch muscle holds a higher no of mitochondria?
type 1
which type of twitch muscle has a higher capillary density?
type 1
a high jumper would mainly have what type of fibre?
type 1 (fast/red)
a marathon runner would mainly have what type of fibre?
type 2 (slow/white)
what is tetanus?
mechanical response to multiple stimuli/APs
when does summation occur in muscle contraction?
when twitches occur in quick succession and overlap
what is fused tetanus?
Rapid stimulation resulting in no muscle relaxation
how many times higher is the forced produced by fused tetanus compared to a twitch?
3-5x
what is rate recruitment?
method to regulate muscle force- the rate at which AP fires
more Ca2+ = ?
more contraction + more force
A single AP will case a twitch contraction to last how long?
100- 300ms
what does a high frequency stimulation result in?
complete fusion of contractile response – a fused tetanus
each single muscle fibre is innervated by ...?
1 motoneuron
what is the MU?
motor unit
what does the motor unit consist of?
motoneuron, axon and all the muscle fibres it innervates
what 2 factors determine the size of a MU?
number of muscle fibres and their diameter
the force output of a muscle is _____ _____ to its fibre cross-sectional area
directly proportional (larger diameter=more force)
What is motor unit recruitment?
increasing the number of active motor units
what is muscle hypertrophy?
increase in muscle size
what MUs are recuited first?
smallest MUs e.g.
what type of twitch fibre is low force fatigue resistant?
slow twitch type 1, low force fatigue resistant fibres (slow twitch type I)