Physiology of the Muscular System
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Transcript Physiology of the Muscular System
Physiology of the Muscular
System Chapter 11
Anatomy & Physiology
Functions
• Movement
• Heat production
• Posture
Typical cells
Muscle cell=fiber
Plasma membrane Sarcolemma
Cytoplasm
Sarcoplasm
Endoplasmic
reticulum
Sarcoplasmic
reticulum (SR)
Many mitochondria
Multiple nuclei
Muscle cell structures not found
in other cells
• Myofibrils: bundles of very fine fibers
• Thick and thin myofilaments: very fine
fibers that make up myofibrils
• Sarcomere: segment of myofibril
between two Z lines; contractile unit
• T tubules: run transversely across
sarcoplasm at right angle to long axis of
the cell; transmit electrical impulses thru
cell
Myofilaments
• 4 protein molecules that make up
myofilaments: Myosin, actin, tropomyosin,
troponin
• Thin filaments: actin, tropomyosin,
troponin
• Thick filaments: mostly myosin
Contraction
• Motor neuron: nerve cell that
stimulates muscle cells
• Neuromuscular junction: motor
neuron connects to sarcolemma
• This connection is a synapse in
which there is a narrow gap across
which the neurotransmitter,
acetylcholine, is released
Neuromuscular Junction
Mechanism of contraction
Motor neuron acetylcholine binds to
receptors on sarcolemma impulse
travels along sarcolemma thru T tubules
to SR Ca released from SR binds to
troponin exposing actin molecules in
thin filaments myosin in thick
filaments bind to actin and pull thin
filaments to center of sarcomere
Mechanism of Relaxation
• Ca pumped back into SR shuts
down the contraction troponin can
again block actin’s active site
Energy for Muscle
Contractions
• ATP: adenosine triphosphate
• CP: creatine phosphate
Glucose & Oxygen
• Glucose stored in form of
glycogen in muscle
• Excess oxygen molecules in
sarcoplasm bound to myoglobin
Anaerobic respiration
• Allows body to avoid use of
oxygen in short term
• Produces lactic acid
• Accumulation of lactic acid in
muscles causes burning
sensation
Motor unit
• One motor neuron plus the
muscle fibers it attaches to
• The fewer the number of fibers
supplied by one motor neuron the
more precise the movements that
can be produced.
Myography
• Force from the contraction of a
muscle is recorded as a line that
rises & falls as muscle contracts
& relaxes
• For a muscle to contract, an
electrical stimulus of enough
intensity (threshold stimulus) is
applied to muscle
Twitch contraction
• Quick jerk of
muscle
• M. doesn’t contract
at moment of
stimulus
• 3 phases:
– Latent period
– Contraction phase
– Relaxation phase
Treppe: Staircase
Phenomenon
• Gradual step like increase in
strength of contractions that can
be observed in a series of twitch
contractions
Tetanus
• If a series of stimuli come in a rapid
enough succession, muscle doesn’t
have time to relax completely
• Smooth, sustained contractions
Tonic contraction
(or muscle tone)
• Continual partial contraction in a
muscle
• Important for maintaining posture
• Flaccid: less tone than normal
• Spastic: more tone than normal
Isotonic contraction
“equal tension”
• Tone or tension
within a muscle
remains the
same, length of
muscle changes
• The muscle
shortens
Isometric contraction
“same length”
• Muscle length
remains the same
while muscle
tension increases
• The muscle is
unable to shorten
Cardiac muscle
• Striated involuntary
• Cardiac m. fibers
form strong
electrically coupled
junctions: intercalated
discs
• Branching of
individual fibers
• T tubules are larger
than skeletal muscle
Smooth muscle
• Single nuclei, no T tubules
• Calcium for contraction comes from
outside the cell
• 2 types: visceral & multiunit
• Visceral: found in digestive, urinary,
reproductive tracts in hollow organs
• Multiunit: found in vessels, arrector pili