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Harper and Keele: Musculoskeletal: L8

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Overview of the muscles and types

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September 15, 2021
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2020/2021
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Vicki waring
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Lecture 8: Muscles I: Introduction and Overview

Muscle Types: Classification

1) Skeletal muscle
● Attached to bones
● Attachment to bones makes locomotion possible
● 40% of body mass is made up of muscle
● Muscles generate heat as a byproduct of their contraction and thus
participate in thermal homeostasis
● The muscle cell, or myocyte, develops from myoblasts derived from the
mesoderm
● skeletal muscle is arranged in bundles surrounded by connective tissue
● skeletal muscle is striated due to the regular alternation of contractile
proteins actin and myosin
● The cells are mutinucleated as a result of the many myoblasts that fuse
to form each long muscle fibre

2) Cardiac muscle forms the contractile walls of the heart
● The cells of cardiac muscle, cardiomyocytes also appear striated under
the microscope
● Unlike skeletal fibres, cardiomyocytes are single cells typically with a
single centrally located nucleus
● A principal characteristic of cardiomyoctes is that they contract on their
own intrinsic rhythms without any external stimulation
● Cardiomyocytes attach to each other via specialized cell junctions
called intercalated discs - these hold adjacent cells together across the
dynamic pressure changes of the cardiac cycle
● The cardiac muscle pumps blood through the body and is under
involuntary control

3) Smooth muscle tissue contraction is responsible for the involuntary
movements in internal organs
● It forms the contractile component of the digestive, urinary and
reproductive systems, as well as the airways and arteries
● Each cell is spindle-shaped with a single nucleus and no visible
striations

, Muscle Types: Muscle Action

● Flexion - a movement that decreases the angle between two body parts e.g.
flexion at the elbow is decreasing the angle between the ulna and the
humerus
○ Reduced angle
● Extension
○ Increased angle

● Abduction - movement away from the midline
● Adduction - movement towards the midline

● Medial rotation - movement towards the midline
○ Rotating your straight leg to point the toes inwards
● Lateral rotation - movement away from the midline
● Circumduction - full rotation around the midline

Pronation and Supination
● Pronation = facing down
● Supination = facing up

Protraction and Retraction
● Protraction = movement in a forward direction
● Retraction = movement in a backward direction


Skeletal Muscle

Two major groupings of muscles
● Forelimb
○ Including thorax and neck
● Hindlimb
○ Including abdomen


Skeletal Muscle: Organisation

● Each skeletal muscle has three layers of
connective tissue called mysia that enclose it and
provide structure to the muscle as a whole
○ They compartmentalize the muscle fibers
within the muscle
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