Title: Muscular Control of Movement Chapters 17 and 18
1Muscular Control of Movement Chapters 17 and 18
- Review of Gross Anatomy
- 430 voluntary muscles in the body.
- The muscle is
- 75 water,
- 20 protein,
- and 5 inorganic salts and other substances.
2Types of Muscles
- 1. Smooth - blood vessels and organs.
- 2. Cardiac - heart.
- 3. Skeletal - movement muscles.
3Origins and Insertions
- The origin of the muscle is the relatively stable
skeletal part to which the muscle attaches. - This is usually more proximal.
4Origins and Insertions
- The insertion of the muscle is the more mobile
skeletal part to which the muscle attaches and is
more distal.
5Connective Tissue Components
6The Structure and Function of Skeletal Muscle
- An individual muscle cell is called a muscle
fiber. - A muscle fiber is enclosed by a plasma membrane
called the sarcolemma.
7Sarcolemma
8The Structure and Function of Skeletal Muscle
- The cytoplasm of a muscle fiber is called the
sarcoplasm. - The extensive tubule network found in the
sarcoplasm includes - t-tubules - allow communication and transport of
substances throughout the muscle fiber - sarcoplasmic reticulum - which stores calcium.
9Sarcoplasm
10The Structure and Function of Skeletal Muscle
- Myofibrils are composed of sarcomeres, the
smallest functional units of muscle. - A sarcomere is composed of filaments of two
proteins, which are responsible for muscle
contraction.
11The Structure and Function of Skeletal Muscle
- Myosin is a thick filament, folded into a
globular head at one end. - An actin filament is composed of actin,
tropomyosin, and troponin.
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14The Structure and Function of Skeletal Muscle
- One end of each actin filament is attached to a z
disk.
15Sarcomere
- The bands are named according to their optical
properties. - The I band (isotropic) - velocity of light is
same in all directions. - Contains actin only.
16Sarcomere
- A band (anisotropic) - light does not scatter
equally. - Contains both actin and myosin.
- Z disk (zwischen) - German word for between.
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18Sarcomere
- H zone - center of A band.
- Contains myosin only.
19The Sliding Filament Theory
- Muscle action is initiated by a motor nerve
impulse.
20The Sliding Filament Theory
- The action potential travels along the
sarcolemma, then through the tubule system, and
eventually causes stored calcium to be released
from the sarcoplasmic reticulum.
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22The Sliding Filament Theory
- Calcium binds with troponin, and then troponin
lifts the tropomyosin molecules off of the active
sites on the actin filament, opening these sites
for binding with the myosin head.
23The Sliding Filament Theory
- Once it binds with the actin active site, the
myosin head tilts, pulling the actin filament so
that the two slide across each other. - The tilting of the myosin head is the power
stroke.
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26The Sliding Filament Theory
- Energy is required before muscle action can
occur. - The myosin head binds to ATP, and ATPase found on
the head splits ATP into ADP and Pi, releasing
energy to fuel the contraction.
27The Sliding Filament Theory
- Muscle action ends when the calcium is actively
pumped out of the sarcoplasm back into the
sarcoplasmic reticulum for storage. - This process, leading to relaxation, also
requires energy supplied by ATP.
28Skeletal Muscle and Exercise
- Most skeletal muscles contain both ST and FT
fibers.
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30Skeletal Muscle and Exercise
- The different fiber types have different ATPases.
- The ATPase in the FT fibers acts faster,
providing energy for muscle action more quickly
than the ATPase in ST fibers.
31Skeletal Muscle and Exercise
- FT fibers have a more highly developed
sarcoplasmic reticulum, enhancing the delivery of
calcium needed for muscle action.
32Skeletal Muscle and Exercise
- Motor neurons supplying FT motor units are larger
and supply more fibers than do neurons for ST
motor units. -
- Thus FT motor units have more fibers to contract
and can produce more force than ST motor units.
33Skeletal Muscle and Exercise
- The proportions of ST and FT fibers in an
individuals arm and leg muscles are usually
quite similar.
34Skeletal Muscle and Exercise
- ST fibers have high aerobic endurance and are
well suited to low-intensity endurance activities.
35Skeletal Muscle and Exercise
- FT fibers are better for anaerobic activity.
- FTa fibers are well utilized in explosive bouts
of exercise.
36Skeletal Muscle and Exercise
- Fiber type is predominantly determined by
genetics. - Composition will change over the course of your
life as FT fibers atrophy and die.
37Classification of Muscle Fibers
- Characteristic Type I Type IIa TypeIIb
- Oxidative capacity High Mod. High Low
- Glycolytic capacity Low High Highest
- Contractile speed Slow Fast Fast
- Fatigue resistant High Moderate Low
- Motor unit strength Low High High
38Characteristics of Muscle Fiber Types
- Characteristic ST FTa FTb
- Fibers per motor neuron 10-180 300-800 300-800
- Motor neuron size Small Large Large
- Nerve conduction velocity Slow Fast Fast
- Contraction speed (ms) 110 50 50
- Type of myosin ATPase Slow Fast Fast
- Sarcoplasmic Ret. Dev. Low High High
39Motor Units
- A motor unit consists of a single motor neuron
and all the muscle fibers it supplies
40Neuro-muscular Interaction
- Motor units give all-or-none responses.
- For a unit to be recruited into activity, the
motor nerve impulse must meet or exceed the
threshold. - Threshold of excitation.
41Neuro-muscular Interaction
- When this occurs, all muscle fibers in the motor
unit act maximally. -
- If the threshold is not met, no fibers in that
unit act.
42Neuro-muscular Interaction
- More force is produced by activating more motor
units, and thus more muscle fibers.
43Neuro-muscular Interaction
- In low-intensity activity, most muscle force is
generated by ST fibers. - As the resistance increases, FTa fibers are
recruited, and at even higher intensities, the
FTb fibers are activated.
44Ramping of Muscle Fibers
45Neuro-muscular Interaction
- The same pattern of recruitment is followed
during events of long duration.
46Muscle Action
- Muscles involved in a movement can be classified
as - agonists (prime movers)
- antagonists (opponents or resistors)
- synergists (assistants)
- fixator, neutralizer, stabilizer
47Muscle Action
- The three main types of muscle action are
- concentric, in which the muscle shortens
- static, in which the muscle acts but the joint
angle is unchanged - eccentric, in which the muscle lengthens.
48Generation of Force
- The number of motor units activated.
- Force production can be increased by recruiting
more motor units. - The type of motor units activated.
- The size of the muscle.
49Generation of Force
- The muscles initial length when activated.
- Force production can be maximized if the muscle
is stretched 20 prior to action. - At this point, the amount of energy stored and
the number of linked actin-myosin cross-bridges
are optimum.
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51Generation of Force
- The angle of the joint.
- All joints have an optimal angle at which the
muscles crossing the joint function to produce
maximum force. - This angle varies with the relative position of
the muscles insertion on the bone and the load
placed on the muscle.
52Generation of Force
- The muscles speed of action.
- Speed of action also affects the amount of force
produced. - For concentric action, maximum force can be
achieved with slower contractions. - The closer you get to zero velocity (static), the
more force can be generated.
53Muscle Action
- With eccentric actions, however, faster movement
allows more force production.
Eccentric
Concentric
54Requirements for Large Muscle Development
- Proper nutrition
- 65 CHO, 20 Fat, 15 Protein
- Resistance Training
- Genetics
- Hormonal Secretion Levels
- Testosterone and Androgens
55ACSM Strength Guidelines
- F 2-3 days per week.
- I intensity
- gt85 of max for strength,
- 50-65 for muscular endurance.
- T duration
- 30-90 secs per set,
- 8-12 reps,
- 14 workrest ratio
- S resistance of any type.
56Types of Training
- Isometric
- muscular tension,
- no movement.
57Types of Training
- Isotonic - muscular tension, movement.
- Set resistance
- Variable resistance
58Types of Training
- Isokinetic - muscular tension, speed of movement
is controlled.
59Strength Training Myths
- Strength training will cause muscle boundness.
- Women who strength train will become
masculinized. - Strength training reduces speed.
- No pain - No gain.
60Strength Training Myths
- It takes hours of training daily to gain muscle
mass. - Food supplements will speed up or cause muscle
and strength development. - Anabolic steroids are a safe and effective aid.