Lab 8 Flashcards

1
Q

Muscle Fiber

A

Single muscle cell, comprised of many myofibrils, multiple nuclei, surrounded by a sarcolemma

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2
Q

Myofibril

A

Long, rod-shaped organelles that fill sarcoplasm, contain the sarcomeres and the light/dark bands

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3
Q

Sarcomere

A

The smallest contractile unit of muscle
Go from the middle of one I band (z disc) to the middle of the next I band.
So from Z disc to Z disc
Consists of actin, tropomyosin, troponin, myosin, titin

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4
Q

Myofilament

A

Threadlike structures that make up myofibrils, composed primarily of actin and myosin

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5
Q

Thick filament

A

Myosin, each thick filament is surrounded by 6 thin filaments

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6
Q

Thin filament

A

Actin, each thin filament is surrounded by 3 thick filaments
Actin is what gets pulled in and shortens the sarcomere

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7
Q

T Tubule

A

Located between the A and I band. Run deep into the muscle fiber between Terminal cisterns of the SR. Ca2+ storage

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8
Q

Triad

A

Regions where SR terminal cisterns border a T tubule on each side.

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9
Q

Endomysium

A

Surrounds each muscle fiber, subdividing the fascicles

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10
Q

Perimysium

A

Connective tissue surrounding each muscle fascicle

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11
Q

Epimysium

A

Dense connective tissue covering the entire muscle

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12
Q

Tendon

A

All 3 sheaths converge to form cordlike attachment to bone or other muscles
Provide durability and conserve space, provide a route of entry/exit for nerves and blood vessels

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13
Q

Aponeurosis

A

All 3 sheaths converge to a sheet like attachment to bones or other muscles.
Provide durability and conserve space, provide a route of entry/exit for nerves and blood vessels

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14
Q

Tropomyosin

A

Blocks the myosin binding site on the actin, moved by Troponin

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15
Q

Troponin

A

Reacts to calcium and moves tropomyosin off binding site to allow myosin to bind

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16
Q

Break down of the Structure of skeletal muscle

A

I band: light band, Z disc in middle
A band: Dark band, contains the H zone and M line
3 connective tissue sheaths covering muscle at various layers

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17
Q

Neuromuscular junction

A

Where the motor neuron axon connects with a muscle fiber, one motor neuron can innervate more than one muscle fiber. Motor neuron releases ACh
Entry of Na+ into muscle cell through ACh receptor channel initiates muscle action potential

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18
Q

Excitation-contraction coupling

A

The conversion of electrical stimulus to movement.
The AP releasing ACh in motor neuron, ACh binds to receptors in end plate which causes depolarization, change in potential triggers contraction

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19
Q

Electrical stimulus

A

Substitute for ACh, triggers a muscle twitch

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20
Q

Muscle Twitch

A

The mechanical response to a single action potential
Composed of 3 phases: Latent, contraction, relaxation

21
Q

Latent period

A

Period of time that elapses between the generation of AP and the start of muscle contraction. Chemical changes occur in preparation for contraction. Length does not change with increase in stimulus.

22
Q

Contraction phase

A

Starts at end of latent period, ends when muscle tension peaks.

23
Q

Relaxation phase

A

Period of time from peak tension until the end of muscle contraction

24
Q

How do different intensities of electrical stim affect twitch

A

As you increase voltage the peak tension increases until you reach a max tension value, then increasing voltage will not increase tension anymore.

25
Q

End plate potential

A

The graded depolarization in the skeletal muscle fiber that is elicited in response to one action potential from the motor neuron

26
Q

What is released when there is an action potential in a motor neuron

A

Acetylcholine

27
Q

What is the motor unit

A

A neuron and all the muscle fibers it stimulates, stronger muscle contraction means more motor units are recruited

28
Q

Motor unit recruitment

A

Increasing the number of active motor units produces a steady increase in muscle force.

29
Q

Increasing tension affect on motor unit recruitment

A

A larger contraction implies more motor units are activated.
Weak contraction implies fewer motor units are activated but each motor unit develops its maximal tension regardless.

30
Q

Maximal voltage

A

When all the muscle fibers have been activated, maximal tension/contraction occurs

31
Q

Threshold Stimulus

A

Smallest stimulus required to induce action potential in a muscles sarcolemma

32
Q

Wave summation

A

When muscle fibers that are developing tension are stimulated again before the fibers have relaxed.

33
Q

Treppe

A

Progressive increase in force when a muscle is stimulated in succession, each successive twitch peaks slightly higher than the previous. The muscle must fully relax between the stimuli

34
Q

How does increasing stimulus frequency affect force generation

A

The faster the stimuli occur the larger the force, the stimuli are summed together to create a greater affect

35
Q

Unfused tetanus

A

When stimulus are applied frequently over a prolonger period the maximum possible muscle will reach a plateau

36
Q

Fused tetanus

A

Once plateau is reached, if stimuli are applied with an even greater frequency the twitches will fuse to where peaks and valleys are indistinguishable

37
Q

Maximal tetanic contraction

A

When the stimulus frequency reaches a value beyond which no further increases in force are generated by the muscle

38
Q

Causes of fatigue

A

Accumulations of lactic acid, ADP, Pi

39
Q

Fatigue

A

Decline of muscle’s ability to maintain a constant level of force after prolonged repetitive stimulation
OR
Failure of a muscle fiber to produce tension because of a previous contractile activity.

40
Q

Rest period affect on fatigue

A

Rest period will delay the onset of fatigue
Rest allows for Lactic acid, ADP, and Pi concentrations to decrease it will delay fatigue and allow for maintaining maximum force.

41
Q

Isometric contraction

A

Muscle stays at a fixed length, the load attempted to move is equal in weight to the force generated by the muscle.

42
Q

Isotonic contraction

A

Skeletal muscle length changes, so the load moves a measurable distance
If muscle is shortening it’s isotonic concentric contraction (muscle generates a force greater than the load)
Latent period gets longer as load increases

43
Q

Active force (know graph)

A

Generated when myosin thick filaments bind to actin thin filaments engaging the cross bridge cycle and ATP hydrolysis

44
Q

Passive force (Know graph)

A

Generated by the stretching of a muscle and results from the elastic recoil of the tissue, caused by titin which acts as molecular bungee cord

45
Q

Why is there a dip in the force graph

A

At 80 mm the active force has decreased but the passive force has not increased to a significant value

46
Q

Length tension relationship

A

Describes the amount of tension that is produced by a muscle as a feature of its length. The longer the muscle the larger the force. Peak tension is when sarcomeres are at their resting length because this provides optimum alignment between actin and myosin

47
Q

Load velocity relationship

A

The greater the load the smaller the shortening velocity (slower)
Lighter load also means longer contraction duration

48
Q

Can you label all the diagrams?

A

Prove it. Now.

49
Q

Latent period of isotonic contraction

A

cross bridges cycle and, when muscle tension exceeds the load, muscle shortening occurs.