The human body has about 600 muscles
Did you know that?
- More than 50% of body weight is muscle!
- Muscle is made up of proteins and water
A few fun facts about your muscular system
- There are muscles in the root of your hair that give you goosebumps
- It takes 17 muscles to smile and 42 muscles to frown
- The hardest working muscle is the eye
- The largest muscle in your body is the Gluteus Maximus
The muscular system is made up of muscles and tendons
How many muscles do I have?
- I have more than 650 muscles in my body
- My muscles make up half of my body weight
My muscles are important because they…
- Hold my organs in place
- Hold my bones together so that I can move
- Help me chew my food
- Open and close my eyelids
- Pump my blood
- Allow me to run and play
- Help me to smile
What are muscles made of?
- Stretchy, elastic cells and fibers
Why do I need tendons?
- Tendons attach my muscles to my
bones helping my body move.
- The thickest tendon is located above
your heel in the back of your leg
One way to keep our muscles strong…
- Eat foods from the meat group every day. They are high in protein which helps to
build strong muscles
- Exercise every day
Muscle Classification
Functionally
● Voluntarily- can be moved at will
● Involuntarily- can’t be moved intentionally
Structurally
● Striated- have stripes across the fiber
● No striations- smooth
The Three types of Muscles
Classification of Muscle
Skeletal- found in limbs Cardiac- found in heart Smooth- found in viscera
Striated, multi-nucleated Striated, 1 nucleus Not striated, 1 nucleus
voluntary involuntary involuntary
Skeletal Muscle
● Functions
- Locomotion and breathing
- Maintain posture
- Heat production
● Form smooth contours of body
● Vary in shape (spindle, fan or circle shape)
Skeletal Muscle Characteristics
● Striated
● Cells are multinucleate
● Voluntary- subject to conscious control
● Attached to bones
● Slow to fast contraction
Skeletal Muscle Activity
● Contracts rapidly but tire easily
● Can exert much power without ripping
● Cells are surrounded by connective tissue
● Adds strength and support
Naming of Skeletal Muscles
● Location of the muscles origin and insertion
- Example: sterno (on the sternum)
● Shape of the muscle
- Example: deltoid (triangular)
● Action of the muscle
- Example: flexor and extensor (flexes or extends a bone)
Head and neck muscles
Trunk Muscles
Deep trunk and Arm Muscles
Muscle of the Pelvis, Hip, and Thigh
Muscles of the Lower Leg
Superficial Muscles: Anterior
Superficial Muscles: Posterior
Masseter
Elevate Mandible
Temporalis
Elevate & Retract Mandible
Trapezius
Extend Head, Adduct, Elevate or Depress Scapula
Latissimus Dorsi
Extend, Adduct and rotate arm Medially
Deltoid
Abduct, Flex & Extend Arm
Pectoralis Major
flexes, adducts & rotates arm medially
Biceps Brachii
Flexes Elbow Joint
Triceps Brachii
Extend Elbow Joint
Rectus Abdominus
Flexes Abdomen
External Oblique
Compress Abdomen
External Intercostals
Internal Intercostals
Diaphragm
Forearm Muscles
● Flexor carpi- Flexor wrist
● Extensor carpi- Extends wrist
● Flexor digitorum-Flexes fingers
● Extensor digitorum-Extends fingers
● Pronator-Pronates
● Supinator-Supinates
Gluteus Maximus
Extends & Rotates Thigh Laterally
Rectus Femoris
Flexes Thigh, Extend Lower Leg
Gracilis
Adducts and Flexes Thigh
Sartorius
Flexes Thigh, and rotates thigh laterally
Biceps Femoris
Extends Thigh & Flexes Lower Leg
Gastrocnemius
Plantar Flexes and Flex Lower Leg
Tibialis Anterior
Smooth Muscle
● Lines walls of hollow organs
● Ex stomach, bladder
● Found in two layers
● Layers alternately contract
● Function:
- Propels substances along a tract
Smooth Muscle Characteristics
● No striations
● Single nucleus
● Involuntary- no conscious control
● Found mainly in the walls of hollow organs
● Slow contraction
● Fibers are thin and spindle-shaped.
● No striations
● Single nuclei
● Involuntary
● Contracts slowly
Smooth Muscle
● They fatigue but very slowly
● Found in the circulatory system
- Lining of the blood vessels
- Helps in the circulation of the blood
● Found in the digestive system
- Esophagus, stomach, intestine
- Controls digestion
● Found in the urinary system
- Urinary bladder
- Controls urination
Cardiac muscle
● Pumping mass of heart
● Arranged in spiral
● Heart muscle cell behave as one unit
● Heart muscle always contracts to its full extent
Cardiac Muscle Characteristics
● Striations
● Single nucleus
● Involuntary
● Found only in the heart
● Contracts at slow, steady rate
Cardiac Muscle Activity
● Intercalated disks closely coordinate
activity
● Own pacemaker controls contraction
● Can be stimulated by the nervous
system
● Muscle contracts→ chambers
become smaller forcing blood into
arteries
Body Movements
Abduction- moving the leg away from the midline
Adduction- moving toward the midline
Circumduction- cone-shaped movement, proximal end doesn’t move, while distal end
moves in a circle
Types of Musku-skeletal movement
Skeletal Muscle
● Bundles are formed by:
Epimysium epi=upon
Perimysium peri=around
Endomysium end=within
Terms
● Plasmalemma= Sarcolemma
● Sarcoplasm= Cytoplasm
● Sarcoplasmic Reticulum= Endoplasmic Reticulum
Connective Tissue Wrappings of Skeletal Muscle
● Endomysium- around single muscle fiber
● Perimysium- surround multiple fibers
● Fascicle- bundle of fibers
● Epimysium- covers the entire skeletal muscle
Myofibrils
● Cylinder as long as entire muscle fiber
● Each fiber contains 100s to 1000s
● Responsible for contraction
● When myofibrils contract the whole cell contracts
Consist of proteins
- Actin: thin filaments
- Myosis: thick filaments
Connective Tissue Sheaths
● Connective Tissue of a Muscle
- Epimysium: dense regular c.t. surrounding entire muscle
- Separates muscle from surrounding tissues and organs
- Connected to the deep fascia
- Perimysium: Collagen and elastic fibers surrounding a group of muscle
fiber called a fascicle
- Endomysium: Loose connective tissue that surrounds individual muscle
fibers
- Also contains b.v., nerves, and satellite cells (embryonic stem cells
function in repair of muscle tissue)
● Collagen fibers of all 3 layers come together at each end of muscle to form a
tendon or aponeurosis
● Muscle contractions require energy
- Blood vessels deliver oxygen and nutrients to produce energy (ATP)
● Muscle contractions are under stimulation from the CNS (Centra Nervous
System)
Sarcomere
● Smallest functional unit of a muscle fiber
● Each myofibril contains 10,000 sarcomeres end to end
● Interaction between thick and thin filaments cause contraction
● Banded appearance
Sarcomere- repeating functional units of myofibril
- About 10,00 sarcomeres per myofibril, end to end
- Each is about 2 µm
Differences in size, density and distributions of thick and thin filaments gives the muscle
fiber a banded or striated appearance
- A bands: a dark band; full length of thick (myosis) filament
- M line- protein to which myosins attach
- H zone- thick but NO thin filaments
- I bands: a light band; from Z disks to ends of thick filaments
- Thin but NO thick filaments
- Extends from A band of one sarcomere to A band of the next sarcomere
- Z disks: a filamentous network of protein. Serves as attachment for actin
myofilaments
Titin Filaments: elastic chains of amino acids; keep thick and thin filaments in proper
alignment
Microanatomy- Sarcolemma and T-Tubules
Sarcoplasmic Reticulum
● Specialized form of SER
● Tubular network around each myofibril
● In contract with T-Tubule
● SR is an elaborate, smooth endoplasmic reticulum
- runs longitudinally and surround each myofibril
- Form chambers called terminal cisternae on either side of the T-tubules
● A single T-tubule and the 2 terminal cisternae form a triad
● SR stores Ca++ when muscle not contracting
- When stimulated, calcium released into sarcoplasm
- SR membrane has Ca++ pumps that function to pump Ca++ out of the
sarcoplasm back into the SR after contraction
Thick and Thin Filaments
Thin
● twisted actin molecules
● Each has an active site where they interact with myosin
● Resting- active site covered by tropomyosin which is held in place by troponin
Thick
● Myosis
● Head attaches to actin during contraction
● Can only happen if troponin changes position, moving tropomyosin to expose
active site
Muscle Fiber Anatomy
Sarcolemma- cell membrane
- Surrounds the sarcoplasm (cytoplasm of fiber)
- Contains many of the same organelles seen in other cells
- An abundance of the oxygen-binding protein myoglobin
- Punctuated by opening called the transverse tubules ( T-tubules)
- Narrow tubes that extend into the sarcoplasm at right angles to the surface
- Filled with extracellular fluid
Myofibrils- cylindrical structures within muscle fiber
- Are bundles of protein filaments (=myofilaments)
- Two types of myofilaments
- Actin filaments (thin filaments)
- Myosin filaments (thick filaments)
At each end of the fiber, myofibrils are anchored to the inner surface of the
sarcolemma
When myofibril shortens, muscle shortens (contracts)
Myosin( Thick) Myofilament
- Many elongated myosin molecules shaped like golf clubs.
- Single filament contains roughly 300 myosin molecules
- Molecule consists of two heavy myosin molecules wound together to form a rod
portion lying parallel to the myosin myofilament and two heads that extend
laterally
- Myosin heads
- Can bind to active sites on the actin molecules to form cross-bridges. (Actin
binding site)
- Attached to the rod portion by a hinge region that can bend and straighten
during contraction
- Have ATPase activity: activity that breaks down adenosine triphosphate (ATP),
releasing energy. Part of the energy is used to bend the hinge region of the
myosin molecule during contraction
Sliding Filament Model of Contraction
- Thin filaments slide past the thick ones so that the actin and myosin filaments
overlap to a greater degree
- In the relaxed state, thin and thick filaments overlap only slightly
- Upon stimulation, myosin heads bind to actin and sliding begins
- Each myosin head bind and detaches several times during contraction, acting
like a ratchet to generate tension and propel the thin filaments to the center of the
sarcomere
- As this event occurs throughout the sarcomeres, the muscle shortens
Sliding Filaments and Cross Bridges
- Sarcomere contraction: Sliding Filament Theory
- Thin filament slide toward center of sarcomere
- Thick filaments are stationary
- Myosin head attaches to active site on actin (crossbridge)
- Pull actin towards center, then detaches
Muscle Fatigue and Oxygen Debt
- When a muscle is fatigues, it is unable to contract
- The common reason for muscle fatigue is oxygen debt
- Oxygen must be “ repaid” to tissue to remove oxygen debt
- Oxygen is required to get rid of accumulated lactic acid
- Increasing acidity (from lactic acid) and lack of ATP causes the muscle to
contract less
Muscles and Body Movements
- Movements is attained due to a muscle moving an attached bone
- Muscles are attached to at least two points
- Origin: attachment to moveable bone
- Insertion: attachment to an immovable bone
Effects of Exercise on Muscle
- Result of increased muscle use
- Increase in muscle size
- Increase in muscle strength
- Increase in muscle efficiency
- Muscle becomes more fatigue resistant
Types of Ordinary Body Movements
● Flexion- decreases angle of joint and brings two bones closer together
● Extension- opposite of flexion
● Rotation- movement of a bone in longitudinal axis, shaking head “no”
● Abduction/Adduction
● Circumduction