Locomotor: Skeletal Muscle & Joints Flashcards

Week 6 Anatomy Supporting Lectures

1
Q

5 Features

Smooth muscle type features

A
  • Involuntary
  • Non-striated
  • Mnonucleated
  • Iregular fibres
  • Reponds to nerve impulses, hormones and local stimuli
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2
Q

5 Features

Cardiac muscle type features

A
  • Involuntary
  • Striated
  • 1-2 nuclei
  • Regular fibres
  • Responds to nerve impulses, hormones and local stimuli
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3
Q

5 Features

Skeletal muscle type features

A
  • Voluntary
  • Striated
  • Multi-nucleated
  • Regular fibres
  • Responds to nerve impulses only
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4
Q

Five key functional properties of skeletal muscle

A
  • Excitability (responds to nerve stimulus)
  • Conductivity (stimulus spreads throughout whole body)
  • Contractability
  • Elasticity
  • Extensibility
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5
Q

Muscle attachment terminology, origin vs insertion

A
  • Origin: Attachment to stationary bone
  • Insertion: Attachment to moveable bone
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6
Q

What is a muscle fascicle

Bonus: What sepparates muscle fasicles?

A

These are the base packets of fibres within a muscle, how you arrange these and how many of these you include define the muscle

Separated by perimysium

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7
Q

What are myofibrils?

A

Myofibrils are cylindrical contractile units. These are so tightly packed within a fibre that it forces the nuclei to the outside

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8
Q

Tendons vs Ligaments

A
  • Tendon: connects muscle to bone, tough and inelastic
  • Ligaments: connect bone to bone, flexible and elastic
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9
Q

What is a muscle fibre?

Bonus: what are fibre surrounded by?

A

Is a muscle cell or myocyte

Surrounded by the endomysium

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10
Q

What are sarcomeres?

A

These are repeating protein pattern that make up myofibrils. They are the smallest componant of skeletal muscle

One sarcomere goes from z line to z line

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11
Q

Cortical bone features

Also known as ____?

A
  • Rigid
  • Tightly packed
  • Formed of cylindrical structures called osteons

Also know as compact bone

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12
Q

Trabecular bone features

Also known as ____ or _____ ?

A
  • Consists of loosely arranged struts

Also known as spongy or cancellous

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13
Q

Fibrous vs Cartilaginous vs Synovial joints

A
  • Fibrous is solid and made of fibers (ligaments and sutures)
  • Cartilaginous is solid and made of cartilage
  • Synovial allows movement
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14
Q

Primary and Secondary cartlaginous joints

A
  • Primary - example growth plates
  • Secondary - intervertebral disks
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15
Q

Think in terms of axis of movement and how they fit together

Classifications of synovial joints

A
  • Hetero-morphic joints will allow movement about an axis.
  • Homo-morphic can allow sliding on a plane (in the case of the carpal joints) or movement about an axis (in the case of a saddle joint)
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16
Q

Example of a plane joint and the movement it allows

A

Joints connecting the carpal bones

Allows gliding/sliding

17
Q

Example of a saddle joint and the movement it allows

A

CMC (carpalmetacarpal) of thumb joint

Allows bi-axial rotation

18
Q

Example of a hinge joint and the movement it allows

A

The elbow

Uni-axial rotation

19
Q

Example of a pivot joint and the movement it allows

A

Radio-ulnar joint

Uni-axial

20
Q

Example of an ellipsoid joint and the movement it allows

A

The wrist

Bi-axial

21
Q

Example of a ball and socket joint and the movement it allows

A

Shoulder joint

Multi-axial

22
Q

Example of a condyloid joint and the movement it allows

A

Metacarpophalangeal joint

Bi-Axial (doesn’t allow rotation)

Basically the same as an ellipsoid joint

23
Q

What aren’t all muscles ball and socket joints if they allow the most movement?

A

Generally there is a tradeoff between movement and stability. Shoulder joints are very mobile however not particularly stable and often dislocate

24
Q

Hilton’s Law

A

The nerve that supplies the muscles acting on a joint also supply the joint.

This means that different joints affected by the same muscle e.g. the knee and hip joint are both acted on by the rectus femoris can reffer pain. So someone reporting pain in their knee could actually have a problem witht he hip and you must examine both.