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Chapter 11 The Muscular System

Chapter 11 The Muscular System. How Muscles Produce Movement. Produce movement by exerting force on tendons which in turn pull on bones Generally cross one joint & are attached to bones of joint One bone remains stationary & other moves Attachment sites

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Chapter 11 The Muscular System

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  1. Chapter 11The Muscular System

  2. How Muscles Produce Movement • Produce movement by exerting force on tendons which in turn pull on bones • Generally cross one joint & are attached to bones of joint • One bone remains stationary & other moves • Attachment sites • Origin = attachmt of muscle tendon to stationary bone • Insertion = attachmt of tendon to movable bone • Insertion moves toward origin • Belly of muscle = fleshy portion between tendons • Actions = movements occurring when muscle is contracted

  3. Fascicle Arrangement • Effects of fascicle arrangement • Fibers within fascicles are parallel to each other • Fascicles within muscles arranged in 1 of 5 patterns • Parallel • fascicles parallel to long axis of muscle • terminate in tendons @ either end of muscle • ex: stylohyoid • Fusiform • fascicles nearly parallel to long axis • taper toward tendons • ex: digastric muscle • Circular • fascicles arranged in concentric circles • ex: orbicularis oris

  4. Fascicle Arrangement • Effects of fascicle arrgmt (ct’d) • triangular • spread over broad area & converge @ thick, central tendon • ex: pectoralis major • pennate • short fascicles; tendon extends entire length of muscle • 3 subcategories • unipennate = fascicles on one side of tendon (extensor digitorum longus) • bipennate = fascicles on both sides of centrally positioned tendon (rectus femoris) • multipennate = fascicles attached obliquely from a # of directions to several tendons (deltoid)

  5. Fascicle Arrangements • A contracting muscle shortens to about 70% of its length • Fascicular arrangement represents a compromise between force of contraction (power) and range of motion • muscles w/ longer fibers have greater range of motion • short fiber can contract as forcefully as a long one

  6. How Muscles Produce Movement • Coordination within muscle groups • movement = result of antagonistic muscle pairs @ joints • prime mover (agonist) = muscle that contracts to cause action • antagonist stretches & yields to prime mover • within a pair of muscles, roles of antagonist/prime mover switch with movement produced • ex: biceps/triceps brachii in flexion/extension of elbow

  7. Naming Skeletal Muscles • Names of most skeletal muscles are based on several types of characteristics • Characteristics may be reflected in name of muscle • direction of fibers • size of muscle • major = large  pectoralis major • minimus = smallest  gluteus minimus • shape of muscle • delt = triangular  deltoid • rhomb = diamond  rhomboid • action of muscle • Adduction of thigh  adductor longus • number/site of origins • biceps brachii/femoris: 2 sites of origin • triceps brachii: 3 sites of origin • quadriceps femoris: 4 sites of origin

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