Ch. 5 Muscular System || Anatomy & Physiology CP

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50 Terms

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3 functions of muscles
movement, heat production, posture
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4 characteristics of muscle tissue

1. Excitability

2. Contractility

3. Extensibility

4. Elasticity

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excitability
ability to receive and respond to stimuli
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contractility
ability to shorten forcibly when stimulated
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extensibility
the ability to be stretched or extended
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elasticity
the ability to bounce back after being stretched or shortened
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peristalsis
the process of wave-like contractions of smooth
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3 types of muscle tissue
skeletal, cardiac, smooth
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endomysium
Surrounds individual muscle fibers
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fascicle
bundle of muscle fibers
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perimysium
surrounds fascicles
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epimysium
surrounds entire muscle
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fascia
a band or sheet of fibrous connective tissue that covers, supports, and separates muscle
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sarcolemma
membrane of a muscle fiber/cell
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sarcoplasm
cytoplasm of a muscle fiber/cell
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T tubules
transverse tubules, network of channels through cell to activate contraction
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sarcoplasmic reticulum
specialized endoplasmic reticulum of muscle cells, stores calcium
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sarcomere
contractile unit of a muscle fiber
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myosin
thick filament
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actin
thin filaments
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myosin and actin
contractile and motor proteins in sarcomere
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Z line
A dark thin protein band to which actin filaments are attached, marks the boundaries between sarcomeres
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Flexors
decrease angle of joint
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Extensor
increases joint angle
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Abductor
moves bone away from midline
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Adductor
Moves bone closer to midline
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Rotator
contracts to provide stability, allowing rotation
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Scapular Stabilizer
controls movement of scapula to stabilize shoulder joint
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Evertor
turns the sole of the foot outward away from midline
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Invertor
turns the sole of the foot inward toward midline
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ligament
Connects bone to bone
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tendon
Connects muscle to bone
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sliding filament model
states that the thick and thin filaments slide past each other so that their degree of overlap increases
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motor unit
a single motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it innervates (supplies), the more motor units stimulated - the stronger the contraction
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all-or-none response
a neuron's reaction of either firing (with a full-strength response) or not firing
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recruitment
increased intensity of stimulation can activate other surrounding motor units
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Why to rub a muscle cramp

1. break cross bridges

2. increase blood flow

3. decrease pain sensitivity

4. disperse lactic acid

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neuromuscular junction
point of contact between a motor neuron and a skeletal muscle fiber
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synaptic cleft
the narrow gap that separates the neuron from the muscle cell.
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Acetylcholine
neurotransmitter that triggers muscle contraction
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cross bridges
myosin fiber head, which connects to the thin actin filaments during a contraction, acting like oars to pull actin inward
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troponin and tropomyosin
Contraction Inhibiting Proteins that are attached to actin
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twitch muscle contraction
single, quick cycle of contraction and relaxation
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sustained muscle contraction, tetanus
a long muscular contraction resulting from a rapid series of nerve impulses
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repeated stimulation contraction, treppe
Phenomenon in which each successive twitch contracts more forcefully than the previous one
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tonus
natural and continuous, slight contraction of a muscle; especially in smooth muscle
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3 periods of muscle contraction
latent, contraction, relaxation
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latent period
time between stimulus and contraction
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contraction period
time between the beginning of muscle shortening and the development of peak tension
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refractory period
the time following contraction when a new stimulus cannot be initiated