05. Muscular System

 


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 Basic Human Anatomy 

Lesson 5: Muscular System 

Welcome to Lesson 5 of the Basic Human Anatomy Course. Today, we’ll be studying the Human Muscular System. 

I have 4 goals for you in this lesson: 

1. Describe the general features of the skeletal muscles. 

2. Describe the general arrangement of the trunk and limb musculature. 

3. Give a sample drawing, identify the class of lever. 

4. Name the components of a skeleton-muscular unit. Given a description of a muscle’s role in a motion, name that role. 

MUSCLE TISSUES 

The cellular elements of muscle tissues are specialized to produce motion by contraction. They also produce body heat. (See lesson 2 for a discussion of muscle tissues.) 

a. Smooth muscle tissue is utilized to make up the muscular portion of the various visceral organs (stomach, blood vessels, etc.). 

b. Cardiac muscle tissue makes up the muscular wall of the heart—the myocardium. 

c. Striated muscle tissue is used in the makeup of several types of muscles. The main type of muscle is the skeletal muscle. Other types of muscles made with striated muscle tissue are the facial or integumentary muscles and muscles of the jaw apparatus.

THE SKELETAL MUSCLE 

Each skeletal muscle is an individual organ of the human body. Each is made up of several types of tissues–mainly, striated muscle fibers and FCT (fibrous connective tissue). Each is attached to and moves bones. Bones are parts of the skeleton serving as levers. 

a. General Construction of a Skeletal Muscle. The large portion of a muscle is known as its belly or fleshy belly. This muscle is attached to bones by tendons or aponeuroses. Tendons and aponeuroses are similar to each other. However, tendons are cord-like and aponeuroses are broad and flat. The fleshy portion may be directly connected to the bone. If so, it is called a “fleshy attachment.” 

b. Muscular NAVL (Nerves, Arteries, Veins, Lymphatics). 

(1) From the main NAVL (nerve, artery, vein, lymphatic), there are branches going to each muscle. These muscular branches are bound together by an FCT sheath to form a neurovascular bundle. 

(2) The motor point is that specific location on the surface of the muscle where the neurovascular bundle enters. 

(3) A motor unit is the single motor neuron and the number of striated muscle fibers activated by it (innervation). The importance of the motor unit is that its fibers work in unison. Either all fibers within a unit contract or none contract. When a certain amount of force is needed, one unit after another is recruited until just enough units are available to produce the desired action.

NAMING SKELETAL MUSCLES 

The name of a muscle may appear with the abbreviation M., meaning Musculus or muscle. We abbreviate muscles (plural) with the symbol Mm. Skeletal muscles are named according to their physical attributes (shape, size, length, etc.), their location, or their function. For example: SHAPE 

deltoid M. (DELTA = D , Greek letter D) 

biceps M. (BICEPS = two-head, BI = two CEPS = head) 

SIZE 

adductor magnus M. (MAGNUS = great, large) 

LENGTH 

adductor longus M. (LONGUS = long) 

LOCATION 

biceps brachii M. (BRACHII = of the arm) 

biceps femoris M. (FEMORIS = of the thigh) 

FUNCTION 

rotatores Mm. (ROTATORES = rotators) 

(They turn/rotate the vertebral column.) 

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