Chapter 5 - Muscular System Flashcards

1
Q

What is the muscular system?

A

This system links the nervous and nervous system and is responsible for generating the forces that MOVE the human body.

Note: Bones help us stand up straight, where as the muscles help us move and attach to the bones via tendons.

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2
Q

What are the 3 types of muscles in the body?

A

skeletal, cardiac (heart), and smooth (tissues and internal organs)

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3
Q

What is skeletal muscle? What are the primary functions?

A

The type of muscle tissue that connects to bones and generates the forces that create movement.

Primary functions: Produce movement, support the skeletal system (bones), help with homeostasis by producing heat.

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4
Q

What is the fascia?

A

The first layer of connective tissue. It surrounds the skeletal muscles and bones.

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5
Q

What is epimysium?

A

The inner layer of the fascia that directly surrounds the muscle. Also known as “deep fascia”.

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6
Q

What are fascicles?

A

The largest bundle of fibers that within a muscle. Fascicles are surrounded by perimysium.

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7
Q

What is perimysium?

A

Connective tissue surrounding a muscle fascicle.

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8
Q

What is endomysium?

A

Connective tissue that wraps around individual muscle fibers within a fascicle.

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9
Q

What is glycogen?

A

Glucose (sugar), that is deposited and stored in bodily tissues (like liver and muscle cells). The storage form of carbohydrates.

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10
Q

What is myoglobin?

A

Protein-based molecule, that carries oxygen into the muscles.

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11
Q

What is myofibrils?

A

Where contraction of a muscle occurs. They are the contractile components of a muscle cell.

*These are the circles within the muscle fiber.

The myofilaments (actin and myosin) are contained within a myofibril.

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12
Q

What is myofilaments?

A

The filaments of a myofibril; include actin and myosin.

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13
Q

What is Actin?

A

A thin myofilament that helps produce muscular contraction.

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14
Q

What is Myosin?

A

A thick myofilament that helps product muscular contraction.

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15
Q

What is Sarcomere?

A

The structural unit of a myofibril composed of actin and myosin filaments between two Z-lines. This is the functional unit of the muscular system, this is where muscular contraction occurs.

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16
Q

What is the Z-line?

A

The meeting point of each sarcomere.

17
Q

What is neural activation?

A

The nervous system’s signal that tells a muscle to contract.

The communication link between the nervous system and the muscular system.

18
Q

What is the neuromuscular junction?

A

The specialized site where the nervous system communicates directly with muscle fibers.

19
Q

What is synapse?

A

A junction or small gap between the motor neuron and muscle cells.

20
Q

What is a motor unit?

A

A motor neuron and all of the muscle fibers that it innervates.

21
Q

What is action potential?

A

Nerve impulse that is relayed from the central nervous system, through the peripheral nervous system, and into the muscle across the neuromuscular junction.

22
Q

What are neurotransmitters?

A

Chemical messengers that cross the synapse between neuron and muscle and assist with nerve transmission.

Essentially, neurotransmitters represent the translation of the nervous system’s electrical message into a form the muscle cells can understand and act on.

23
Q

What is Acetylcholine (ACh)?

A

A neurotransmitter used by the neuromuscular system

It helps the action potential cross the synapse into the muscle, which initiates the steps in a muscle contraction.

24
Q

What is Sliding Filament Theory?

A

The series of steps in muscle contraction involving how myosin (thick) and actin (thin) filaments slide past one another to produce a muscle contraction, shortening the entire length of the sarcomere.

25
Q

What is excitation-contraction coupling?

A

The physiological process of converting an electrical stimulus to a muscle contraction.

26
Q

What is a power stroke?

A

The myosin heads bind to actin and pull them toward the sarcomere center, which slides the filaments past each other, shortening the muscle.

27
Q

What is ATP (Adenosine Triphosphate)?

A

A high-energy molecule that serves as the main form of energy in the human body; known as the energy currency of the body.

28
Q

What is resting length?

A

The length of a muscle when it is not actively contracting or being stretched.

29
Q

What are Type I muscle fibers?

A

Muscle fibers that are small in size, generate lower amounts of force, and are more resistant to fatigue.

(Standing up, maintaining posture)

30
Q

What are Type II muscle fibers?

A

Muscle fibers that are larger in size, generate higher amounts of force, and are faster to fatigue.

(Physical activities - Running or Jumping)

31
Q

What is the All-or-nothing principle?

A

Motor units cannot vary the amount of force they generate; they either contract maximally or not at all.

32
Q

What are Capillaries?

A

The smallest blood vessels and the site of exchange of elements between the blood and the tissues.

33
Q

What is the main difference between Type I and Type II muscle fibers?

A

Type I - smaller in size, less force produced, slow to fatigue, “slow twitch”, more capillaries, increased oxygen delivery

Type II - larger in size, more force produced, “fast twitch”, fewer capillaries, short-term contractions