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Growth

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Growth & Development of Skeletal Muscle – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Growth


1
Growth Developmentof Skeletal Muscle
2
Skeletal, Striated, Voluntary Muscle
3
6 weeks from conception
4
  • At the end of week 3, the intra-embryonic
    mesenchyme differentiates into three loose
    aggregate pairs of mesenchyme on each side of the
    neural tube (Paraxial, Intermediate, Lateral)
  • Paraxial mesoderm differentiates into the future
    dermatome (dorsal surface), myotome (middle
    layer), and sclerotome (ventral layer), forming
    dermis, muscle, and connective tissue
    respectively.
  • Intermediate mesoderm, will form the future
    urogenital system.
  • Lateral mesoderm will develop into future body
    cavities and parts of the body wall.

5
Somite Development
Dorsal View of an Embryo at about 22 days (8
somite stage)
  • The paraxial mesoderm will develop into paired
    cuboidal bodies, or somites. These will
    eventually develop into the bones (sclerotome),
    muscles (myotome), and dermis (dermatome) of and
    surrounding the axial skeleton.
  • Somites appear as bumps on the dorsal surface of
    the embryo.
  • At the end of week 3, 4-12 somites are present By
    the end of week 5, 42-44 can be counted. However,
    most appear between days 20-30, giving this
    period the title of the somite period of
    development.
  • Somites appear cranially to caudally, beginning
    at the occipital end. They can be counted and are
    used to roughly estimate the age of the embryo.
  • 5 - 7 coccygeal pairs disappear leaving 37 pairs
    of somites.

6
Law of Original Innervation
The myoblasts (future muscle cells) form
concurrently with the spinal nerves and they
migrate out from the notochord together. This
results in the formation of 31 spinal nerves with
associated skin, muscle, and connective tissue.
7
Dermatome an area of skin receiving mesenchyme
from a specific somite that is supplied by a
single spinal nerve and its ganglion
8
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10
6 weeks
8 weeks
11
Mesenchyme
Myoblasts
Myotubules
Single Muscle Fibre
Peripheral Nuclei
12
Myogenesis
  • Mesoderm pluripotent connective tissue cell
  • Presumptive myoblast undergoing mitosis,
    mononucleated cell incapable of fusion or
    contractile protein synthesis
  • Myoblast mononucleated cell not undergoing
    mitosis, cell capable of fusion and of
    synthesizing myofibrillar proteins
  • Myotubule multinucleated cell from fusion of
    myoblasts, may contain sarcomeres depending on
    stage. Nuclei at centre in early stages migrating
    to periphery as matures to muscle fibre
  • Muscle fibre mature multinucleated muscle cell
    with myofibrils

13
Growth of Muscle
  • Muscle fibre number increases prenatally and for
    a short time postnatally
  • Fiber number doubles between 32 weeks gestation
    and 4 months of age
  • Girth and length increases continue into
    postnatal period
  • Postnatal increase in muscle girth due almost
    entirely to hypertrophy not hyperplasia
  • Fibres increase length by
  • increase in of sarcomeres (major)
  • increase in length of sarcomeres
  • length increase primarily at musculotendinous
    juncton in respone to functional length

14
Muscle Composition
  • FETUS - fibres small in number and widely
    separated by extracellular material
  • TERM - still small, greater number, more closely
    packed
  • ADULT - Larger diameter with little space between
    them
  • Therefore
  • decrease in sodium and chloride (extracellular)
  • increase in potassium (intracellular)
  • decrease in water content

15
Changes in Muscle Compositionin Water, Sodium
(Na), Chloride (Cl) and Potassium (K) as a
percentage of adult levels from 13 weeks of
gestation to Adulthood
16
Muscle Mass Estimated from Creatinine Clearance
Creatinine levels sensitive to diet and exercise
17
K40 estimate of Fat Free Mass
  • Assumed constant proportion of potassium in Fat
    Free Mass
  • Average values acceptable, whereas indivudual
    estimates have considerable error due to
    variability in proportion of potassium in Fat
    Free Mass

18
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19
Estimated Muscle Massas a Percentage of Body
Weight (data collected from various sources)
20
Strength Differences
  • No gender difference in strength if expressed per
    unit of cross-sectional area of muscle
  • Disproportionate strength increase in male
    adolescence more in upper extremities than trunk
    or lower extremities
  • No significant difference (7-17 years) in lower
    extremity strength after adjusting for height,
    between boys and girls

21
Peak Strength Velocityoccurs after Peak Height
Velocity
22
Muscle Width(distance and velocity curves)
  • Peak velocities occur later than peak height
    velocity in boys and girls

23
Strength Maturity not reached until late
twenties
24
Resistance Training
  • Children can weight train with individual
    monitoring
  • Effort/Benefit ratio is very high prior to
    puberty
  • Training prior to puberty has lasting effect

25
Fibre Typing
  • Type I
  • Red (Slow Twitch Fibres)
  • Type II (IIa IIb)
  • White (Fast Twitch Fibres)
  • High proportion Type I and undifferentiated Type
    IIc fibres during early and mid-childhood in
    comparison to adulthood
  • Little known about sex associated differences in
    fibre type distribution

26
Dahlström, M. (Karolinska Institute)The dancer
Physical effort, muscle fibre types, and energy
intake and expenditure
  • Muscle fibre type composition in young dancers,
    even at the very beginning of their professional
    dance training, differs from that in the average
    individual and is characterised by a high of
    type I fibres, similar to that found in 20 years
    old dancers.
  • This, together with the fact that detraining did
    not change the muscle fibre type composition,
    supports the idea that the high percentage of
    type I fibres in dancers is due to a selection of
    individuals with suitable muscle fibre
    composition to the dance profession rather than
    being an effect of training.
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