Muscles Flashcards

1
Q

3 types of muscle - which are striated?

A

Skeletal - striated
Cardiac - striated
Smooth - non-striated

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2
Q

Myoglobin

A

Protein with similar structure to a single subunit of Hb - an O2 storage molecule, providing O2 to working striated muscles.

Higher affinity for O2 than Hb - gives up O2 in muscles, especially in low pH.

Released into bloodstream (myoglobinaemia) when striated muscle dies or damaged (necrosis or rhabdomyolysis).

Can cause renal damage - removed by kidneys into urine (myoglobinuria) - tea coloured urine.

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3
Q

Rhabdomyolysis

A

Muscle damage

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4
Q

Myoglobinaemia

A

Myoglobin in blood.

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5
Q

Myoglobinuria

A

Myoglobin in urine.

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6
Q

Sarcolemma

A

Outer membrane of muscle cell.

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7
Q

Sarcophagi

A

Cytoplasm of muscle cell

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8
Q

Sarcosome

A

Mitochondrion

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9
Q

Sarcomere

A

Contraction unit in striated muscle

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10
Q

Sarcoplasmic reticulum

A

Smooth ER of muscle cell

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11
Q

Myofibril structure (sarcomere)

A

Dark A band - H zone in centre, M line in centre of this
Light I band - Z band in centre

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12
Q

Skeletal muscle structure

A

Many myofibrils make muscle fibre (sarcolemma).
- muscle fibres surrounded by endomysium

Many muscle fibres make fascicle.
- fascicle surround by perimysium

Many fascicles make muscle, as well as blood vessels.
- muscle surrounded by epimysium

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13
Q

Tropomyosin

A

Stabilises structure of contraction unit.

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14
Q

Muscle contraction speeds

A

Slow, fast, intermediate

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15
Q

Muscle fibre types

A

Type 1 - slow twitch fibres (slow oxidative)

Type 2a - fast twitch fibres (fast oxidative glycolytic)

Type 2b - fast twitch fibres (fast glycolytic)

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16
Q

Type 1 fibres:
Capillary supply?
Aerobic/anaerobic?
Myoglobin levels?
Number of mito?
Number of cytochromes?
Colour?
How fast do they fatigue?
What type of activities are they used in?
Examples of actions

A

Rich capillary supply
Aerobic
High myoglobin levels
Many mito
Many cytochrome
Red in colour
Fatigue resistant
Endurance type activities
Standing/walking

17
Q

Type 2a:
Capillary supply?
Aerobic/anaerobic?
Myoglobin levels?
Number of mito?
Number of cytochromes?
Colour?
How fast do they fatigue?
What type of activities are they used in?
Examples of actions

A

Rich capillary supply
Aerobic
High myoglobin levels
Many to intermediate no. of mito
Many cytochromes
Red to pink
Moderate fatigue resistance
Assist type 1 and 2b activities
Standing/walking (recruited 2nd)

18
Q

Type 2b:
Capillary supply?
Aerobic/anaerobic?
Myoglobin levels?
Number of mito?
Number of cytochromes?
Colour?
How fast do they fatigue?
What type of activities are they used in?
Examples of actions

A

Poor capillary supply
Anaerobic
Low myoglobin levels
Few mito
Few cytochromes
White (pale)
Rapidly fatigue
Strength/anaerobic type activities
Standing/walking - recruited last
Jumping/running/sprinting

19
Q

What are cytochromes?

A

Haemoproteins that functions as an electron shuttle in ETC - therefore more mito = more cytochromes.

20
Q

What ion does continued muscle contraction rely on? + what energy molecule also needed?

A

Ca2+ ions (and ATP)

21
Q

How do cardiac muscles look under the microscope?

A

Striated
Centrally positioned nucleus (1 or 2 per cell)
Intercalated discs
Branching

22
Q

ANP

A

Atrial natriuretic peptide
Released by atria during heart failure
Specifically congestive heart failure

23
Q

BNP

A

Brain-type natriuretic peptide
Released by ventricles
Specifically left ventricular hypertrophy, mitral valve disease

24
Q

Hypertrophy

A

Cells increase in size

25
Q

Hyperplasia

A

Cells increase in number

26
Q

Smooth muscle - histology

A

Spindle shaped
Single central large nucleus
Form sheets, bundles or layers
Multiple adjacent capillaries
Very tightly packed

27
Q

How are smooth muscle cells joined?

A

Gap junctions

28
Q

Where is smooth muscle found?

A

Contractile walls of passageways/cavities
Involuntary muscle
- means it can cause high BP; painful menstruation; lung disease; abnormal gut mobility; incontinence

Eg small intestine

29
Q

Is muscle repair possible?
- skeletal, cardiac, smooth

A

Skeletal:
Cannot divide - regenerate by mitotic activity of satellite cells so that hyperplasia follows muscle injury.

Cardiac:
Adult tissue generally considered to be incapable of regeneration
Damage - fibroblasts invade, divide and lay down scar tissue

Smooth:
Retain mitotic activity and can form new smooth muscle cells - very good at repairing themselves

30
Q

What does it mean for a muscle to act as a syncytium?

Which muscle types do this?

A

Means wave-like function

Cardiac and smooth muscle do this

31
Q

Satellite cells

A

Precursor cells to skeletal muscle cells - responsible for ability of smooth muscle to regenerate.

32
Q

Neuromuscular junction - what is it? What neurotransmitter is used?

How does its action work?

A

Small terminal swellings of the axons.
Acetylcholine

Nerve impulse releases acetylcholine; binds to receptors on sarcolemma; initiates an action potential which is propagated along the muscle.

33
Q

What is a kranocyte?

A

A connective tissue cell that resides over the terminal Schwann cell.

Functions not fully known, thought to anchor the nerve to the muscle cell.

34
Q

What is myosin?

A