Midterm Study Guide Pt 3
<<Muscular System<<
- Know the 4 characteristic of all muscle cell and what they mean
- Skeletal - Mulitnucleate, Striated, Voluntary
- Cardiac - Uninucleate, Striated/Branching, Involuntary, Intercalculated Disks
- Smooth - Uninucleate, Unstriated, Involuntary,
- Know the following about each type of muscle
- Is it voluntary or involuntary?
- Skeletal - voluntaryÂ
- Smooth - involuntary
- Cardiac - involuntary
- Is it multinucleated?
- Skeletal - multinucleated
- Smooth - Uninucleate
- Cardiac - UninucleateÂ
- What does it look like under the microscope?
- What happens to the muscle when it has tension (is it longer or shorter) - it shortens and then relaxes
Skeletal Muscle Contractions.
- Concentric - shortening of muscle, agonist contracts
- Eccentric - lengthening of muscle, agonist contracts and antagonist relaxes
- Isometric - no change in muscle length both agonist and antagonist contract
All or None Law
- All or none law - When stimulated, a muscle will exhibit maximum tension and all muscle fibers with contract at the same time or not at allÂ
- Cross bridges - formed when actin filaments sliding along and attaching to myosin heads when the sarcomere is activated by an action potentials
- Fast twitch - Type 2, fast, tire quickly
- Slow twitch - Type 1, slow, fatigue resistant
- Parallel - muscle fibers do not cross each other
- Pennate - fiber arrangement attaches obliquely to a central tendon
- The 6 formations a muscle can be in - Unipennate, Bipennate, Multipennate, Fusiform, Bundled, Triangular
Muscular Movements.
- Abduction - movement of a body segments away from the body along the FRONTAL plane
- Adduction - movement of a body segment closer to the body in the FRONTAL plane
- Ulnar deviation - rotation of the hand towards the little finger
- Radial deviation - rotation of the hand towards the thumb
- Supination - lateral rotation of the forearm (palm up)
- Pronation - Medial rotation of the forearm (palm down)
- Plantar flexion - Downward motion of the foot away from the lower leg
- Dorsiflexion - Movement of the tip of the foot toward the lower leg
- Flexion - forward movement of a body segment AWAY from anatomical position in the sagittal plane
- Extension - movement that returns a body segment to anatomical position in the sagittal plane
- Hyperextension - backward movement of a body segment past anatomical position in sagittal plane
- Circumduction - a body segments rational movement such that the end of the segment traces a circle
- Eversion - movement in which the foot’s sole is rolled outward
- Inversion - movement in which the foot’s sole is rolled inward
- Insertion - muscle attachment to a bone that tends to move when the muscle contracts
- Origin - muscle attachment to a relatively fixed structure
- Lateral rotation - Outward movement of a body segment in the transverse plane
- Medial rotation - Inward movement of a body segment in the transverse plane
- Opposition - touching any of your 4 fingers to your thumb (enables grasping of objects)
Diseases and Injuries of Muscular System
Muscle strain - an injury occurring when a muscle is stretched beyond its accustomed limits
Tendinitis - inflammation of a tendon, with pain and swelling
DOMS (delayed onset muscle soreness) - follows participation in an activity, involves microscopic tears in the muscle tissue, with inflammation, swelling, and pain
Muscular Dystrophy - a disorder characterized by progressively worsening muscle weakness and loss of muscle tissue, is a group of disorders
Contusion - a bruise resulting from impact or trauma
Myositis Ossificans - calcium mass forms in a muscle 3-4 wks after a muscle injury in response to trauma
Tendinosis - caused by microtears in the tendon connective tissue, degeneration of a tendon
Shin Splints - pain localized to the anterior lower leg
Hernia - balloon-like section of the abdominal cavity lining protruding through a hole or weakened section of abdomen muscles
Cramp - moderate to sever muscle spasms causing pain
Know where to find each muscle we talked about.
Neuromuscular Junction
- Know the parts and functions of the neuromuscular junction
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- Neuromuscular junction is the link between an axon and a muscle fiber
      1. Axon - long, thin fiber, connected to motor neuron cell body 2. Axon terminal - offshoots the axon, branch out and connect to individual muscle fibers 3. Vesicles - contain acetylcholine in the axon terminal 4. Synaptic Cleft - tiny gap that separates the axon terminal and muscle fiber 5. Acetylcholine receptor sites - receive the neurotransmitter that stimulates muscle (Acetylcholine) 6. Sarcolemma - Delicate membrane surrounding each striated muscle fiber 7. Muscle fiber - An individual skeletal muscle cell
Parts of skeletal muscle
Sarcolemma - Delicate membrane surrounding each striated muscle fiber
Endomysium - fine, protective sheath of connective tissue around skeletal muscle fiber
Perimysium - connective tissue surrounds each primary bundle of muscle fibers or a fascicle
Epimysium - outermost layer of connective tissue that surrounds skeletal muscle
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- Aponeurosis - flat, sheet -like, fibrous tissue connects muscle or bone or other tissues
<<Basic Anatomy/Need to Know<<
directional terms
- Lateral -Â away from the midline of the body
- Medial - toward the midline of the body
- Anterior (ventral) - toward the front of the body
- Posterior (dorsal) - toward the back of the body
- Superior (cranial) - closer to the head
- Inferior (caudal) - away from the head
- Distal - away from the trunk
- Proximal - closer to the trunk
- Superficial - toward the surface of the body
- Deep - away from the surface of the body
Body Systems
- Respiratory - lungs, nasal passages, larynx, pharynx, and trachea
- Delivers oxygen and removes carbon dioxide from blood
- Integumentary - layers of skin
- Protects, eliminates wastes, helps reg body tempÂ
- Nervous - brain, spinal cord, nerves, sensory receptors
- Receives and interprets sensory info, coordinates body movements, includes memory, emotions, and cognition
- Endocrine - endocrine glands
- Secretes hormones
- Reproductive - enables production of offspring
- Male: Penis, Scrotum, Testes
- Female: Uterus, Vagina, Ovaries
- Muscular - Cardiac, smooth, and skeletal muscle
- Pumps the heart, moves food through digestive tract, moves the body
- Skeletal - bones, cartilage, ligaments
- Supports the body, produces blood cells, protects organs
- Urinary - kidneys, bladder
- Removes nitrogen-containing wastes from blood
- Digestive - Stomach, esophagus, intestines
- Breaks down food for absorption of nutrients by the body
- Lymphatic - lymphatic vessels and node
- Returns body fluids to the bloodstream
- Cardiovascular - heart, blood vessels
- Transfers oxygen and nutrients to the body’s cells and removes waste products
- Special Sensory - eyes, ears, organs of smell and taste
- Enables vision, hearing, smell, and taste
pH/Mitosis/RNA Polymerase
pH is a measure of how acidic/basic a solution is
- Acid (6 or less)
- Base (8-14)
- Neutral (7)
What happens during each stage of mitosis
- Prophase - chromatin condenses into chromosomes, cell membrane brakes down
- Metaphase - chromosomes line up in the center of the cell
- Anaphase - centromeres are cut in half, sister chromatids pull toward centrioles
- Telophase - chromosomes “decondense,” new nuclear membrane forms
Know what RNA polymerase is/does
- RNA polymerase is an enzyme responsible for transcribing genetic info in DNA to RNA
Eukaryote (Animal Cell) Breakdown
- Plasma membrane - regulates in and out movement, defines outer shell of cell
- Cytoplasm - liquid and organelles (microvilli, cilla, centrioles) inside the cell (except nucleus)
- Nucleus - control center of the cell contains DNA
- Golgi apparatus - a set of membranous discs in cytoplasm
- Mitochondrion - Organelle that makes ATP
- Smooth ER - network of membranes
- Cytoskeleton - defines cell shape and gives mechanical strength
- Rough ER - Network of membranes that are studded with ribosomes
- Ribosomes - large enzymes that make polypeptides
- Lysosome - contain digestive enzymes
- Peroxisome - contain enzymes involved in a variety of metabolic reactions,
- Centrosome - contains the centrioles (in animal cells) and from which the spindle fibers develop in cell division.
4 Types of Body Tissue
- Connective - supporting tissue, consist of extracellular matrix
- Epithelial - lines and covers, includes epithelia and glands
- Muscular - generates force and permits body movement
- Nervous - conveys information by electrical signaling
Planes of the Body
- Sagittal - divides body into left and right halves
- Frontal - divides body into front and back halves
- Transverse - divides body into upper and lower halves
Elastic and Plastic Responses
- Elastic - ability to spring back into original shape after stretchingÂ
- Plastic - does not snap back after stretching