Muscle Anatomy
epimysium, perimysium, endomysium
3 layers of connective tissue that wrap around a muscle, its fascicles, and its individual muscle cells
Z line/disc
A dark thin protein band to which actin filaments are attached in a striated muscle fiber, marking the boundaries between adjacent sarcomeres.
motor unit
A motor neuron and all of the muscle fibers it innervates
muscle striations
A striped or striated pattern within myofibrils: alternating dark, thick filaments (A bands) and light, thin filaments (I bands)
perimysium
Connective tissue surrounding a fascicle
endomysium
Connective tissue surrounding an individual muscle fiber
tendon
Connects muscle to bone
Muscle Fiber Recruitment
Less force production: fewer or smaller motor units More force production: more or larger motor units
myosin
The contractile protein that makes up the thick filaments of muscle fibers
actin
The contractile protein that makes up the thin filaments of muscle fibers
fascia
a band or sheet of fibrous connective tissue that covers, supports, and separates muscle. Fascia of multiple muscles connects; hence one tight muscle affects other ones.
muscle fiber
a single muscle cell
fascicle
bundle of muscle fibers - each muscle has multiple fascicles within it.
Brain location that contains upper motor neurons that initiate movement
cerebrum; frontal lobe; precentral gyrus (primary motor cortex)
epimysium
connective tissue that surrounds entire muscle and thickens into the tendons at either end of the muscle
A band of sarcomere
contains all of the thick myosin filaments plus any overlapping think actin filaments
sarcomeres
contractile units within myofibrils, the smallest contractile unit of a muscle
Cranial nerve that contain somatic motor fibers for facial expression
cranial nerve VII (facial)
cranial nerves that contain somatic motor fibers for eye muscle movement
oculomotor (cranial nerve III) trochlear (cranial nerve IV) abducens (cranial nerve VI)
sarcolemma
plasma/cell membrane of a muscle fiber/cell literally, "flesh husk"
myofibrils
protein structures that make up muscle fibers.
type of neurons that stimulate skeletal muscle
somatic motor neurons
motor neuron cell body location for skeletal muscles
spinal cord - ventral horn (referred to as "effector neuron" in this picture)
Aponeurosis
strong sheet of tissue that acts as a tendon to attach muscles to bone - one shown for example
H zone
thick filaments only (myosin)
I band
thin filaments only (actin)
cranial nerve that powers up the chewing muscles
trigeminal (cranial nerve V)