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Chapter 10

sudden involuntary contraction of a single muscle within a large group of muscles; usually painless

spasm

i. involuntary
ii. Often painful muscle contractions

iii. Caused by inadequate blood flow to muscles (ex. dehydration), overuse, injury, abnormal blood electrolyte levels

cramp

a. Small capillaries
b. Can produce smooth muscle fibers

pericytes

increase in size of cell
i. Skeletal tissues after birth

hypertrophy

increase in number of cells
i. Smooth muscle in certain instances

hyperplasia

i. Does not have T tubules
ii. Has invaginations of caveolae containing Ca++

iii. Attach to dense bodies functionally similar to Z discs

iv. Use calmodulin instead of troponin as regulatory protein

smooth muscle vs cardiac

smooth muscle squeeze substance through the organs by alternating contracting and relaxing

peristalsis

a. Irregular transverse thickenings of the sarcolemma that connect cardiac muscle fibers to one another
b. Contain desmosomes to hold together gap junctions

intercalated discs in cardiac muscles

an autorhythmic signal can be transmitted to connecting fibers so that they all contract in unison

conneting gap junctions

a. Muscle contracts but does not change length and no movement occurs

isometric contractions

muscle shortens and creates movement to reduce the angle of a joint

concentric

muscle tension resists the load and muscle length increases

eccentric

tension is constant while muscle length changes and movement occurs
1. concentric

2. eccentric

isotonic contraction

a. Extra oxygen over and above the resting oxygen consumption taken in the body after exercise

oxygen debt

a. Before actual muscle fatigue occurs, a person may feel tired and have the desire to stop activity
b. Occurs due to changes in CNS and generally results in cessation of exercise

c. Protective mechanism to stop exercise before muscle damage occurs

central fatigue

a. Even when at rest, skeletal muscle exhibits small amt of tension
b. Established by weak alternating, involuntary activation of small groups of motor units in the muscle

c. Established by neurons that activate skeletal muscle neurons

d. Keeps muscles firm but not enough strong force to produce movement

muscle tone

consists of single somatic motor neuron and all the skeletal muscle fibers it innervates

motor unit

the process in which the number of active motor units increase

mtoor unit recruitment

a. Brief contraction of all muscle fibers in a motor unit in response to a single action potential
b. Brief delay

twitch contraction

a. Inside each synaptic end bulbs, synaptic vesicles
b. Always the neurotransmitter in somatic neurons that innervate skeletal muscle

acetylcholine

a. The region of the sarcolemma opposite the synaptic end bulbs
b. Contains acetylcholine receptors

motor end plate

what happens when nerve impulses arrive at neuromusclar junction

calcium channels open

what happens when calcium channels open and becomes more concetrated in extracellular fluid

influx of calcium

what happens with an influx of calcium

Cause exocytosis of nervous tissue into synaptic cleft which diffuse across synaptic cleft

a. The synapse between a somatic motor neuron and muscle fiber

neuromusclular junction

When the myosin head attaches to actin, the myosin head is referred to as this

cross bridge

a. The sequence of events that links a muscle action potential and sliding of the filaments

Excitation-contraction coupling

a. Describes the mechanism that allows muscles to contract
b. Myosin pulls on actin, causing the thin filament to slide inward

sliding filament theory

i. Regulatory protein
ii. Blocks the myosin binding sites in relaxed muscle

iii. Held in place by troponin molecules

tropomyosin

i. Attachments of Ca++ ions induce a change in shape which pulls tropomyosin away from the actin binding sites
ii. Allows myosin heads to attach and produce contraction

troponin

Region in center of H zone that contains proteins that hold thick filaments together at center of sarcomere.

M line

Narrow region in center of each A band that contains thick filaments but no thin filaments

H zone

Lighter, less dense area of sarcomere that contains remainder of thin filaments but no thick filaments. A Z disc passes through center of each

I band

Dark, middle part of sarcomere that extends entire length of thick filaments and includes those parts of thin filaments that overlap thick filaments.

A band

Narrow, plate-shaped regions of dense material that separate one sarcomere from the next.

Z disc

a. Filaments inside a myofibril do not the entire fiber length but are arranged in these functional units

sacromere

i. Individual molecules join and twist into a helix to form a filament
ii. each actin molecule has a myosin binding site where a myosin head can attach

iii. thin filament

actin

i. Acts as a motor protein in all types of MT
ii. Each molecule is shaped like two golf clubs twisted together with the tails of the molecule point toward the M line in the center of the sarcomere and form the shaft of the filament

iii. Have two binding sites: actin and ATP

1. ATP binding functions as ATPase (produces energy for muscle contraction)

iv. thick filament

myosin

a. Transverse tubule and two terminal cisternae on either side

triad

a. Dilated end sacs of the sarcoplasmic reticulum that butt against the T-tubules from both sides
b. large amout of calcim is stored

terminal cisternae

what happens when action potential travels along sarcolemma and enter T-tubules

it causes a release of Ca⁺⁺ ions from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (terminal cisternae) into the sarcoplasm which initiates muscle contraction

muscle plasma membrane

sacrolemma

a. A broad flat sheet that attaches sheet-like muscles needing a wide area of attachment

aponeruosis

rope like band, connects muscle to bone

tendon

a. Protein that contains oxygen used by the mitochondria for ATP production
b. In sarcoplasm

myoglobin

muscle fibers formed from myoblasts cannot undergo

mitosis

b. Mesodermal cells
c. Where embryonic development skeletal muscle fibers arise from

myoblasts

once fusion occurs in from myoblasts what happens

muscle fiber loses its ability to undergo cell division

an overcoat of dense irregular CT that surrounds the entire muscle

endomysium

dense irregular CT that surrounds groups of muscle fibers called fascicles

perimysium

fine sheath of CT composed of reticular fibers surrounding each muscle fiber

epimysium

dense sheet of CT lines body wall and limbs, supports/surrounds muscles and other organs of the body
i. Allows free movement

ii. Contains blood vessels, nerves and lymphatic vessels

iii. Holds muscles with similar functions together

fascia

multinucleated, longitudinal, and striated

skeletal

one nucleus, striated, branched, and intercalated discs

cardiac

one nucleus, spindle shaped, and no striations

visceral ( smooth muscle)

ability to respond to certain stimuli by producing electrical signals called action potentials; nervous tissue

electrical exciability

ability to contract and shorten in length when stimulated by an action potential

Contractility

ability ot stretch without damage

extensibility

ability to return to its original shape and resting length after contraction or extension

elasticity

the fiber is stimulated at 80-100x per sec, it does not relax at all

Fused (complete) tetanus

Unfused (incomplete) tetanus

when a skeletal muscle fiber can only partially relax b/t stimuli at a rate of 20-30x per sec, a sustained but wavering contraction occur

a. Stimuli arriving at different times causes larger contractions

wave summation

b. without oxygen
c. pyruvic acid molecules converted to lactic acid

anaerobic glycosis

what happens to lactic acid

transferred to liver by blood and converted back to glucose/pyruvate

Glucose broken down into two molecules of pyruvic acid by

glycolysis

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