Muscles 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the functions of muscle?

A

The functions of muscle are:

Generate force and movement

Allow us to express and regulate ourselves

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2
Q

What are the 3 types of muscle?

A

The 3 types of muscle are:

Skeletal

Smooth

Cardiac

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3
Q

What kinds of muscle is striated?

A

Skeletal and cardiac muscle is striated

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4
Q

What can you say about the nucleus of skeletal muscle?

A

Skeletal muscle is multinucleated

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5
Q

What do myoblasts not do?

A

Myoblasts do not replace cells if they are damaged

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6
Q

What does skeletal muscle form from?

A

Skeletal muscle forms in utero from mononucleate myoblasts

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7
Q

What happens to skeletal muscle during growth?

A

During growth skeletal muscle increases fibre size

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8
Q

What is muscle?

A

Muscle is bundles of fibres enclosed in connective tissue sheaths

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9
Q

What are muscles attached to the bone by?

A

Muscles are attached to the bone by tendons

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10
Q

What do satellite cells do?

A

Satellite cells replace cells during injury

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11
Q

What cell replaces cells during injury?

A

Satellite cells replace cells during injury

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12
Q

How do satellite cells replace cells during injury?

A

Satellite cells differentiate to form new muscle fibres

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13
Q

What can muscle fibres that cannot completely recover undergo?

A

Muscle fibre that cannot completely recover can undergo hypertrophy to compensate

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14
Q

What is hypertrophy?

A

Hypertrophy is the increase in size of skeletal muscles due to the growth of its component cells

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15
Q

What is striated muscle?

A

Striated muscle is muscle tissue that is marked by transverse dark and light bands

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16
Q

What does the structure of striated muscle look like?

A
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17
Q

What are the compartments of myofibril?

A

Myofibril is split into:

I band

A band

Z line

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18
Q

What is a sacromere?

A

A sacromere is the basic unit of striated muscle, between the Z lines

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19
Q

What is the sarcomere composed of?

A

The sarcomere is composed of:

Myosin filament (thick)

Actin filament (thin)

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20
Q

What does the structure of a sacromere look like?

A
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21
Q

What are the thick myosin filaments surrounded by?

A

The thick myosin filaments are surrounded by a hexagon of thin actin filaments throughout the structure

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22
Q

What is contraction caused by?

A

Contraction is caused by sliding filaments

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23
Q

What happens when the muscle is shortened compared to relaxed?

A

When the muscle is shortened:

A band is unchanged

I band is reduced

H zone is reduced

24
Q

What causes the muscle to contract?

A

The cross bridge causes the muscle to contract

25
Q

What does the cross bridge contain?

A

The cross bridge contains:

Actin binding sites

ATP binding sites

Light chains

Heavy chains

26
Q

Describe the process of the cross chain cycle?

A

The process of the cross chain cycle is:

  1. Cross bridge binds to actin
  2. [Ca2+] rises
  3. Cross bridge moves
  4. ATP binds to myosin causing the cross bridge to detach
  5. Hydrolysis of ATP energizes the cross bridge
27
Q

Why does an increase in [Ca2+] cause the cross bridge to move?

A

An increase in [Ca2+] causes the cross bridge to move because:

Tropomyosin partially covers myosin binding site, which is held in position by troponin

Calcium binds to troponin, changing conformation pulling tropomyosin away

ATP can bind to myosin

28
Q

What is tropomyosin partially covering myosin binding site and being held in position by troponin known as?

A

Cooperative blocking

29
Q

What happens when calcium is removed?

A

When calcium is removed the myosin binding site becomes blocked by tropomyosin again

30
Q

What is excitation/contraction coupling?

A

Excitation/contraction coupling is the conversion of electrical stimulis into a mechanical response

31
Q

What is the process of excitation/contraction coupling?

A

The process of excitation/contraction coupling is:

  1. Muscle action potential propogated
  2. Ca2+ released
  3. Binds to troponin, removing blocking action by tropomyosin
  4. ATP binds to the myosin of the cross bridge
  5. Ca2+ taken up
  6. Tropomyosin blocking action restored
32
Q

What is a motor unit?

A

A motor unit is a motor neuron and a collection of muscle fibres working together

33
Q

How may muscle fibres within a motor uni be arranged?

A

Muscle fibres within a motor unit may be scattered throughout the muscle

34
Q

What is tension?

A

Tension is the load exerted by a muscle

35
Q

What is load?

A

Load is the force exerted on a muscle

36
Q

What is isometric?

A

Isometric is a contraction with a constant contraction length

37
Q

What is an example of a sport that uses isometric contraction?

A

Weightlifting is an example of a sport that uses isometric contraction

38
Q

What is isotonic?

A

Isotonic is a contraction with a shortening muscle length

39
Q

What is an example of an isotonic contraction?

A

An example of an isotonic contraction is running

40
Q

What is lengthening?

A

Lengthening is a contraction with increasing length

41
Q

What is an example of a lengthening contraction?

A

An example of a lengthening contraction is sitting down

42
Q

What are twitch contractions shown by?

A

Twitch contractions are shown by:

Single AP → Muscle fibre → Twitch

43
Q

What is the latent period?

A

The latent period is the time before excitation contraction starts

44
Q

What is the contraction time?

A

Contraction time is the time between the start of tension and the peak of the tension

45
Q

What does muscle fibre contraction time depend on?

A

Muscle fibre contraction time depends on:

Fibre type

[Ca2+]

46
Q

Which type of contaction has the shorter latent period but the longer contraction event?

A

Isometric contraction has the shorter latent period by the longer contraction event

47
Q

What happens as load increases?

A

As load increases:

Contraction velocity decreases

Distance shortended decreases

48
Q

What is tetanus?

A

Tetanus is muscle spasms because AP is only 1-2ms long but the twitch lasts for up to 100ms so more APs may occur in this time, causing summation of APs

49
Q

Why is tetanus tension greater than twitch tension?

A

Tetanus tension is greater than twitch tension because [Ca2+] never gets low enough to allow reblocking of myolin binding sites

50
Q

What does the length-tension relationship look like?

A
51
Q

Why does the length-tension relationship look the way it does?

A

The length-tension relationship looks like this because:

Less overlap of filament is less tension

Too much overlap and filaments interfere with each other

52
Q

What is the optimal length (lo)?

A

The optimal length is the muscle length for the greatest isometric tension

53
Q

What does movement around a limb require?

A

Movement around a limb requires 2 antagonistic groups of muscles:

One flexes

One extends

54
Q

Why are muscles arranged in a lever system?

A

Muscles are arranged in a lever system to amplify muscle shortening velocity to produce increases maneuverability

55
Q

Do muscles exert or support muscle force?

A

Muscles tend to exert more force than they support