Muscular System.ppt

103,253 views 50 slides Sep 30, 2022
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About This Presentation

The muscular system is composed of specialized cells called muscle fibers. Their predominant function is contractibility. Muscles, attached to bones or internal organs and blood vessels, are responsible for movement. Nearly all movement in the body is the result of muscle contraction.


Slide Content

Presented by: Mr.Vijay Salvekar
Associate Professor
Dept. of Pharmacology
GRY Institute of Pharmacy , Borawan
Muscular
System

Did you know that ?
-more than 50% of body weight
is muscle !
-And muscle is made up of
proteins and water

The Muscular System
•Muscles are responsible for all movement
of the body
•There are three basic types of muscle
–Skeletal
–Cardiac
–Smooth

Info About Muscles
•Only body tissue able
to contract
•create movement by
flexingand extending
joints
•Body energy
converters (many
muscle cells contain
many mitochondria)

3 Types of Muscles

Three types of muscle
Skeletal Cardiac Smooth

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 involuntaryinvoluntary

Characteristics of Muscle
•Skeletal and smooth muscle are elongated
•Muscle cell = muscle fiber
•Contraction of a muscle is due to movement
of microfilaments(protein fibers)
•All muscles share some terminology
–Prefixes myoand mysrefer to muscle
–Prefix sarcorefers to flesh

Shapes of Muscles
•Triangular-shoulder, neck
•Spindle-arms, legs
•Flat-diaphragm, forehead
•Circular-mouth, anus

Skeletal Muscle
•Most are attached by tendonsto bones
•Cells have more than one nucleus
(multinucleated)
•Striated-have stripes, banding
•Voluntary-subject to conscious control
•Tendons are mostly made of collagenfibers
•Found in the limbs
•Produce movement, maintain posture,
generate heat, stabilize joints

Structure of skeletal muscle
•Each cell (fibre) is long and cylindrical
•Muscle fibres are multi-nucleated
•Typically 50-60mm in diameter, and up
to 10cm long
•The contractile elements of
skeletal muscle cells are
myofibrils

Skeletal muscle -Summary
•Voluntary movement
of skeletal parts
•Spans joints and
attached to skeleton
•Multi-nucleated,
striated, cylindrical
fibres

Smooth Muscle
•No striations
•Spindleshaped
•Singlenucleus
•Involuntary-no conscious control
•Found mainly in the walls of hollow organs

Smooth muscle
•Lines walls of viscera
•Found in longitudinal or
circular arrangement
•Alternate contraction of
circular & longitudinal
muscle in the intestine
leads to peristalsis

Structure of smooth muscle
•Spindle shaped uni-nucleated cells
•Striations not observed
•Actin and myosin filaments are present(
protein fibers)

Smooth muscle -Summary
•Found in walls of
hollow internal
organs
•Involuntary
movement of
internal organs
•Elongated, spindle
shaped fibre with
single nucleus

Cardiac Muscle
•Striations
•Branchingcells
•Involuntary
•Found only in the heart
•Usually has a single nucleus, but can have
more than one

Cardiac muscle
•Main muscle of heart
•Pumping mass of heart
•Critical in humans
•Heart muscle cells
behave as one unit
•Heart always contracts
to it’s full extent

Structure of cardiac muscle
•Cardiac muscle cells (fibres) are
short, branched and interconnected
•Cells are striated & usually have 1
nucleus
•Adjacent cardiac cells are joined
via electrical synapses (gap
junctions)
•These gap junctions appear as
dark lines and are called
intercalated discs

Cardiac muscle -Summary
•Found in the heart
•Involuntary rhythmic
contraction
•Branched, striated
fibre with single
nucleus and
intercalated discs

Muscle Control
Type of
muscle
Nervous
control
Type of
control
Example
Skeletal
Skeletal Controlled
by CNS
VoluntaryLifting a
glass
Cardiac
Regulated
by ANS
InvoluntaryHeart
beating
Smooth Controlled
by ANS
InvoluntaryPeristalsis

Types of Responses
•Twitch-
–A single brief contraction
–Not a normal muscle function
•Tetanus
–One contraction immediately followed by
another
–Muscle never completely returns to a relaxed
state
–Effects are compounded

Where Does the Energy Come
From?
•Energy is stored in the muscles in the form
of ATP
•ATP comes from the breakdown of glucose
during Cellular Respiration
•This all happens in the Mitochondriaof the
cell
•When a muscle is fatigued(tired) it is
unable to contract because of lack of
Oxygen

Exercise and Muscles
•Isotonic-muscles shorten and movement
occurs ( most normal exercise)
•Isometric-tension in muscles increases, no
movement occurs (pushing one hand against
the other)

How are Muscles Attached to
Bone?
•Origin-attachmentto a movable bone
•Insertion-attachment to an immovable
bone
•Muscles are always attached to at least 2
points
•Movement is attained due to a muscle
moving an attached bone

Muscle Attachments
Origin
Insertion

The Skeletal Muscles
There are about 650 muscles in the
human body. They enable us to
move, maintain posture and generate
heat. In this section we will only
study a sample of the major muscles.

Sternocleidomastoideus
Flexes and Rotates Head

Masseter
Elevate Mandible

Temporalis
Elevate & Retract Mandible

Trapezius
Extend Head, Adduct, Elevate or
Depress Scapula

Latissimus Dorsi
Extend, Adduct & 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
Elevate ribs

Internal Intercostals
Depress ribs

Diaphragm
Inspiration

Forearm Muscles
•Flexor carpi—Flexes 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,
Extends Lower Leg

Gracilis
Adducts and Flexes Thigh

Sartorius
Flexes Thigh, &
Rotates Thigh
Laterally

Biceps Femoris
Extends Thigh &
Flexes Lower Leg

Gastrocnemius
Plantar Flexes Foot
& Flex Lower Leg

Tibialis Anterior
Dorsiflexes and Inverts Foot
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