exam 2 kinesiology

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myosin

"thick" filament that consist of myosin head & tail

actin

"thin" filament that consist of troponin and tropomyosin

macrostructure of the muscles

1) Myofibrils 2) Muscle fiber 3) Fascicles 4) Muscle

what comes out of the electron transport?

ATP & water

what goes into the krebs cycle?

Acetyl CoA

what goes into electron transport?

NADH, FADH2 (krebs cycle)

lines, bands, & zones of sarcomere

ZMZ (lines) h zone IAI (bands)

contractibility

ability to contract when stimulated by action potential

excitability

ability to respond to a stimulation ("action potential") only skeletal muscle obtains

sarcomere is made up of 2 microfilaments

actin & myosin

motor unit activation

activated when the action potential is exceeding the activation threshold

sarcopenia

an age related loss of skeletal mass & strength (30% betweens ages 30 & 70)

tendon

attatches muscle belly to bone

I band & H zone

band & zone that SHORTENS during muscle contraction

I band

band with actin filament only

A band

band with myosin filament

central nervous system

brain & spinal cord

activation of muscle fibers

by "action potential" sent from the nervous system

3 types of muscles in our body

cardiac, smooth, & skeletal

sarcolemma

cell membrane of a muscle fiber

nervous system consist of 2 parts

central & peripheral (CNS & PNS)

concentric contraction

contraction in which the muscles shorten while generating force observed motion=desired effect

eccentric contraction

contraction that occurs when a force applied to the muscle exceeds the force produced by the muscle itself, results in the forced lengthening of the muscle-tendon

muscle fiber

cylinder-shaped muscle cell. contains myofibrils and organelles for ell respiration

action potential

electrochemical signal that travels down the cell membrane

type 2b

fast contraction speed large size low fatigue resistance anaerobic energy

what goes into oxidative?

fat, carbs, and protein

motor unit

function unit of muscle that consist of motor neuron group and a group of muscle fibers that it innervates

power

high rate of muscle contraction *the greater the strength the greater the power

type 2a

intermediate contraction speed intermediate size intermediate fatigue resistance aerobic-oxidative & anaerobic

type of muscle contraction

isometric, concentric, eccentric

muscle

made up of fascicles bonded together

relative strenth

max amount of a force a person can produce in a single effort relative to their body mass *negative relationship= the heavier you are the lower relative strength

anerobic power

max power produced over short term, wingate test this

factors that influence muscle performance

mental health state muscle cross-sectional area muscle fiber joint speed of movement age & sex

peripheral nervous system

moto & sensory nerves

henneman's size principle

motor units are recruited from smallest to largest to produce task-appropriate force production

fascicles

multiple muscle fibers wrapped by a thick sheath

smooth muscle

muscle of the walls of blood vessels & organs involuntary contraction very fatigue resistant

muscle performance

muscle strength (absolute & relative) power endurance

stabilizer

muscle that act to stabilize one joint so the desired movement can be preformed in another joint

antagonist

muscle that opposes the desired effect -if the desired effect is elbow flexion, triceps are the antagonist

agonist

muscle that produces the desired effect -if the desired effect is elbow flexion, biceps is the agonist or the prime movement

cardiac muscle

muscle tissue of the heart involuntary contraction very fatigue resistant

skeletal muscle

muscles supporting and moving the skeleton voluntary contraction

synergist

muscles that work together to create a movement

sliding filament theory

muscular contraction is caused by the sliding of actin filaments over myosin filaments shortens to produce tension

isokinetic contraction

production of muscle force at a constant speed allows maximum tension throughout the range of motion iso= same kinetic= motion

bands and zones

results in "striation" of the muscle

myofibrils

skeletal muscle that is composed of sarcomeres linked

type 1 fibers

slow contraction speed small in size high fatigue resistance aerobic-oxidative energy supply

endurance

the ability to resist muscle fatigue in performance -the greater the muscle strength the longer you can sustain high force production

absolute strength

the max amount of force a person can produce in a single effort *body mass is primarily muscle tissue (lean mass) *body mass correlated with strength (the heavier the stronger)

VO2

the max rate of oxegyn that can be consumed

muscle strength

the maximum force produced by the muscle

motor nerves

transmit info from CNS to skeletal muscle

sensory nerves

transmit info from sensory receptors to CNS

isometric contraction

used to stabilize a joint, such as when a weight is held at waist level neither raising nor lowering

key functions of the skeletal muscle

ventilation, heat & movement production, venous return

H zone

zone with myosin filament


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