Chapter 20- Muscular System and Pathologies
Tendinous attachment on the more movable bone during muscle contraction.
Insertion
Type of contraction in which muscle length remains the same and movement does not occur
Isometric
Type of contraction in which muscle length changes
Isotonic
Main source of energy for muscle contraction
ATP
Principal neurotransmitter involved in muscle contraction
Acetylcholine
Prime mover or muscle causing the desired action
Agonist
Principle stating when a muscle fiber receives a stimulus to contract, it either will contract to its fullest ability or it will not contract at all.
All-or-none Law
Term used to describe the muscle that lengthens while prime movers and their synergists contract and shorten to produce the desired action.
Antagonist
Broad, flat tendon
Aponeurosis
Folded sections of the sarcolemma within neuromuscular junction.
Motor end plate
A single motor neuron and all muscle fibers it innervates
Motor unit
Term synonymous with muscle cells.
Muscle Fibers
Thick filaments located in the center of the sarcomere.
Myosin
Tendinous attachment on the less moveable bone during muscle contraction
Origin
Term to describe a muscle with fibers emerging diagonally from one or more central tendon
Pennate
Body positions maintained by muscle contraction; examples are standing and sitting
Posture
Process of motor unit activation based on need
Recruitment
Cell membrane surrounding muscle fibers
Sarcolemma
Basic unit of muscle contraction
Sarcomere
Most common level arrangement in the body-the load at one end, the pull in the middle, and the fulcrum at the opposite end.
Class 3
Muscle fiber property enabling it to receive and respond to stimulus.
Excitability
Cordlike structure anchoring muscle to bone.
Tendon
Structures made up of proteins called actin, tropomyosin, and troponin.
Thin filaments
Muscle fibers containing large amounts of myoglobin and mitochondria; also called red muscle.
Type 1