Human Anatomy and Physiology - Muscles and Muscle Tissue
Whole Muscle Contraction
- Contraction principles are similar for single fibers and whole muscles.
- Muscle Tension: The force exerted on a load/object during contraction.
- Contraction may lead to muscle shortening or not:
- Isometric Contraction: No shortening; muscle tension increases but does not exceed the load.
- Isotonic Contraction: Muscle shortens as muscle tension exceeds the load.
Motor Unit
- A motor unit consists of a motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it innervates (4 to several hundred fibers).
- Fine Control: Smaller fiber number allows greater fine control.
- Motor fibers from a motor unit are spread throughout the muscle, leading to only a weak contraction when a single motor unit is stimulated.
Muscle Twitch
- A muscle twitch is the simplest contraction resulting from a muscle fiber’s response to a single action potential from a motor neuron.
- Myogram: A tracing that records contraction activity.
- Three Phases of Muscle Twitch:
- Latent Period: Events of excitation-contraction coupling occur, but no muscle tension is observed.
- Period of Contraction: Cross-bridge formation occurs, and tension increases.
- Period of Relaxation: Calcium reenters the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), and tension declines to zero.
- Muscle contracts faster than it relaxes.
Graded Muscle Responses
- Graded muscle responses provide smooth contractions and vary in strength according to needs.
- Responses are graded through:
- Changing frequency of stimulation
- Changing strength of stimulation
Temporal Summation
- Occurs when two stimuli are received by a muscle in rapid succession without complete relaxation. This results in:
- Increased twitch force due to additional calcium release from the second stimulus.
Tetanus
- Unfused Tetanus: Higher stimulation frequency leads to continuous contractions that are not smoothly fused.
- Fused Tetanus: Even higher frequency results in a smooth, sustained contraction with no relaxation between stimuli.
Recruitment of Motor Units
- Recruitment involves sending stimuli to more muscle fibers for precise control. Types of stimuli:
- Subthreshold: Not strong enough for contraction.
- Threshold: Causes the first observable contraction.
- Maximal: Generates the maximum contractile force.
- Size Principle: Smaller motor units are recruited first, followed by larger ones for stronger contractions.
Muscle Tone
- The constant, slightly contracted state of all muscles, due to spinal reflexes that keep muscles firm and ready to respond.
Isotonic vs. Isometric Contractions
- Isotonic Contraction: Muscle changes length while moving a load.
- Concentric: Muscle shortens (e.g., lifting a weight).
- Eccentric: Muscle lengthens while generating force (e.g., lowering a weight).
- Isometric Contraction: Muscle tension increases but the muscle does not shorten or lengthen due to the load being greater than the maximum tension.
Energy for Contraction
- ATP: Essential for muscle functions; it allows for cross-bridge detachment, calcium pumping back into SR, and ionic balance restoration. ATP depletes in 4-6 seconds.
- ATP is regenerated through three mechanisms:
- Creatine Phosphate (CP): Directly phosphorylates ADP to form ATP using creatine kinase.
- Anaerobic Pathway: Glycolysis converts glucose into ATP when oxygen is not available, producing lactic acid.
- Aerobic Pathway: Requires oxygen, yielding more ATP (32 molecules per glucose).
Muscle Fatigue
- Defined as the physiological inability to contract despite continued stimulation.
- Can be caused by ionic imbalances, increased inorganic phosphage, decreased ATP, or decreased glycogen.
Excess Postexercise Oxygen Consumption (EPOC)
- Refers to oxygen required to restore muscle to its pre-exercise state, including replenishing oxygen reserves, converting lactic acid back to pyruvic acid, and resynthesizing ATP and creatine phosphate.