muscle physiology Flashcards

1
Q

which type of muscle is not striated

A

smooth

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2
Q

what causes striations in muscle

A

alternating dark (myosin) and light (actin) bands

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3
Q

what are skeletal muscle nerves innervated by

A

somatic NS and are voluntary

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4
Q

what are cardiac and smooth muscle innervated by

A

autonomic and involuntary

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5
Q

skeletal muscle has ____ contraction, _____ junction, no ___ junction, Ca from ___ ______

A

neurogenic, neuromuscular, no gap junctions, sarcoplasmic reticulum

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6
Q

cardiac muscle has ____ contraction, _____ junctions, Ca from ___ ______ and ____

A

myogenic, gap junctions, ECF and sarcoplasmic

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7
Q

what is an alpha motor unit

A

alpha motor neuron and all the skeletal fibres it innervates

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8
Q

if precision> power how many fibres to each motor unit

A

fewer fibres for control

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9
Q

if power> precision how many fibres to each motor unit

A

lots of fibres for more strength

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10
Q

what is the contractile structure of muscle

A

myofibril

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11
Q

what is the functional structure of muslce

A

sarcomere

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12
Q

what are sarcomeres and where are they

A

smallest component capable of performing function of that organ, between Z lines

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13
Q

what are the 4 zones

A

A band, H zone, M line, I band

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14
Q

describe the steps of ATP, myosin and actin

A

1) ATP is hydrolysed when myosin head unattached 2) ADP + P are bound to myosin and it attaches to actin 3) ADP P released causes contraction 4) ATP reattaches and original positions

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15
Q

what is needed for crossbridge formation

A

Ca and troponin

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16
Q

what is motor recruitment

A

stronger contraction of the whole muscle by using more motor units

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17
Q

what is asynchronous motor recruitment

A

not using all fibres at once to prevent muscle fatigue

18
Q

what does muscle tension depend on

A

frequency of stimulation and sum of contractions, length of muscle fibre at start of contraction, thickness of muscle fibres

19
Q

what do AP’s need to do to create contractions

A

fast, repetitive stimulation = contraction, single AP is just a muscle twitch.

20
Q

what does rapid AP stimulation lead to

A

maximal contraction/ tetanic where muscle is constantly contracted (refractory period in cardiac muscle stops this)

21
Q

what length do muscles need to be before contraction to reach optimal contractions

A

optimal length - relaxed

22
Q

what are isotonic contractions

A

body movements and moving object - muscle tension is constant and muscle length changes.

23
Q

what are isometric contractions

A

supporting objects in a fixed place/ posture - muscle tension develops at constant muscle strength

24
Q

how is muscle tension transmitted to bone

A

tendons

25
Q

what are the main 3 differences between types of skeletal muscle

A

enzyme for ATP synthesis, resistance to fatigue, activity of myosin

26
Q

what are the 3 ATP pathways

A

high energy phosphate (creatine phosphate –> ADP), oxidative phosphorylation (when O2 present), glycolysis (when O2 not present)

27
Q

describe slow oxidative type I muscle fibres

A

slow twitch fibres, aerobic prolonged low work eg posture and walking

28
Q

describe fast oxidative type IIA muscle fibres

A

intermediate fibre twitches, aerobic and anaerobic, prolonged moderate work eg jogging

29
Q

describe fast glycolytic type IIb muscle fibres

A

anaerobic, short but intense work

30
Q

describe the stretch reflex when leaning to one side

A

‘person standing upright leans to one side, the muscle spindles in muscles on the opposite side of the vertebral column will detect stretch and contract to correct

31
Q

why do we have stretch reflex

A

passive change to result in optimal resting muscle length

32
Q

what type of feedback is stretch

A

negative

33
Q

what are muscle spindles

A

sensory receptors for stretch reflex, collection of specialised muscle fibres called intrafusal

34
Q

where do muscle spindles lie in muscle

A

run parallel to normal fibres and in the centre of the muscle

35
Q

what are sensory nerve endings of muscle spindles called

A

annulospiral fibres

36
Q

what types of motor neurones are muscle spindles supplied by, what do they do in contraction

A

gamma, adjust tension of spindle fibres to maintain sensitivity

37
Q

does contraction of muscle spindles contribute to strengh of muscle

A

no

38
Q

what are 4 causes of muscle impairment

A

intrinsic disease, disease of neuromuscular, disease of lower motor neuron, disruption of input to motor nerves

39
Q

what investigations can be done for muscle disease

A

EMG, nerve conduction studies, CK, inflamm markers, biopsy

40
Q

what are symptoms of muscle disease

A

muscle fatigue and weakness, delayed reaction (myotonia) after contraction, muscle pain, stiffness

41
Q

what are some genetic myopathies (intrinsic disease)

A

reduced contractile ability, chronic degeneration, abnormal muscle membrane ions

42
Q

what are acquired myopathies

A

inflammation eg polymyositis, non inflamm eg fibromyalgia, toxic eg alcohol