1 / 22

Muscular System

Muscular System. Origins & Insertions. Origin : Muscle attachment to the more stable bone; often closer to the trunk Reversal of muscle action when origin moves towards insertion Insertion : Muscle attachment to the more movable bone; often distal from the trunk

pilar
Télécharger la présentation

Muscular System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Muscular System

  2. Origins & Insertions • Origin: Muscle attachment to the more stable bone; often closer to the trunk • Reversal of muscle action when origin moves towards insertion • Insertion: Muscle attachment to the more movable bone; often distal from the trunk • Insertion usually moves towards origin • Proximal: closer to the trunk • Distal: farther from the trunk

  3. Muscle Names • Muscle names may fall into one or more of the following categories: • Location • Shape • Action • Number of heads • Attachments (origin & insertion) • Direction of the Fibers • Size of the Muscle

  4. Muscle Fiber Arrangement

  5. Muscle Fiber Arrangement • Parallel Muscle fibers tend to be longer, with a greater ROM potential • Strap: long and thin c fibers running entire length of muscle (sartorius) • Fusiform: spindle shaped (biceps) • Rhomboidal: four-sided, flat shaped (rhomboids) • Triangular: flat & fan-shaped (pec major)

  6. Muscle Fiber Arrangement • Oblique muscle fibers tend to be shorter with greater strength potential, but decreased ROM • Unipennate: one side of a feather (post. tib.) • Bipennate: common feather (rectus femoris) • Multipennate: many tendons c oblique fibers in-between (deltoid)

  7. Functional Characteristics of Muscle Tissue • Five Properties of Muscles: • Normal Resting Length • Irritability • Contractility • Extensibility • Elasticity

  8. Functional Characteristics of Muscle Tissue • Normal Resting Length • Length of muscle when unstimulated

  9. Functional Characteristics of Muscle Tissue • Irritability • Ability of a muscle to respond to a stimulus. A muscle contracts when stimulated, either from a natural stimulus (motor nerve) or artificial stimulus (high volt electrical current)

  10. Functional Characteristics of Muscle Tissue • Contractility • Ability of a muscle to shorten (contract) • A muscle’s length may shorten, lengthen or remain the same length during contraction and stimulation • Isotonic and Isometric • Concentric and Eccentric

  11. Functional Characteristics of Muscle Tissue • Extensibility • The ability of a muscle to stretch or lengthen when a force is applied

  12. Functional Characteristics of Muscle Tissue • Elasticity • The ability of a muscle to recoil or return to normal resting length when the stretching or shortening force is removed

  13. Functional Characteristics of Muscle Tissue “Stretch a muscle and it will lengthen (extensibility). Remove the stretch, and it will return to its normal resting position (elasticity). Stimulate a muscle, and it will respond (irritability) by shortening (contractility).”

  14. Length-Tension Relationship in Muscle Tissue • Tension: The force built up in a muscle • Stretching builds passive tension • Contractile units control active tension

  15. Length-Tension Relationship in Muscle Tissue • Tone: The slight tension that is present in a muscle at all times, even at rest

  16. Length-Tension Relationship in Muscle Tissue • Excursion of a Muscle: The distance from maximum elongation to maximum shortening • A muscle is capable of being shortened to approximately one-half its normal resting length • A muscle can be stretched twice as far as it can be shortened

  17. Active and Passive Insufficiency • Active Insufficiency: Point at which a muscle cannot shorten any farther • Occurs to the agonist • Passive Insufficiency: Point at which a muscle cannot elongate any farther without damage to the muscle fibers • Occurs to the antagonist

  18. Muscle Contractions • Isometric Contractions: Muscle neither lengthens or shortens under load • Isotonic Contractions: • Concentric Contraction • Muscles shorten under load • Eccentric Contraction • Muscles lengthen under load

  19. Roles of Muscles • Agonist: muscle that causes motion • Antagonist: muscle that performs the opposite motion of the agonist • Biceps vs. Triceps • Cocontraction: agonist and antagonist contract together • Stabilizer: makes firm; allows agonist to work more efficiently • Abdominal muscles during a push-up (elbow extensors) • Neutralizer: prevents unwanted motion • Pronator teres neutralizes forearm supination during elbow flexion

  20. Kinetic Chains • Closed Kinetic Chain • Distal segment is fixed; proximal segment moves • Open Kinetic Chain • Distal segment moves; proximal segment is fixed

More Related