A &P chapter 9,10
Myotonic dystrophy
A from of muscular dystrophy that is less common than DMD; in the US it affects about 14 of 10,000 people. SYmptoms include a gradual reduction in muscle mass and of the skeletal muscles, abnormal heart rhythm, and diabetes mellitus. May appear at any time; not sex-linked.Underlying genetic defect is multiple repeats of a particular gene on chromosome 19. Because the number of repeat tends to increase from generation to generation, subsequent geenrations develop more severe symptoms. No effective treatment.
Tetanus
A state of sustained contraction of a muscle that is a normal aspect of skeletal muscle functioning. An acute infectious disease caused by the anaerobic bacterium Clostridium tetani and resulting in persistent painful spasms of some skeletal muscles. Progresses to fixed rigidity of the jaws and sapasms of the trunk and limb muscles. Usually fatal due to respiratory failure.
Spasm
A sudden, involuntary twitch in smooth and skeletal muscle ranging from merely irritating to very painful; may be due to chemical imbalances. In spasms of the eyelid and fascial muscles, called tics, psychological factors may be involved, Stretching and massaging the affected area may help end the spasm. A cramp is prolonged spasm, usually occurs at night or after exercise.
Torticollis
A twisting of the neck in which there is a chronic rotation and tilting of the head to one side, due to injury of the sternocleidomastoid muscle on one side; also called wryneck. Sometimes present at birth when the mucle fibers are torn during difficult delivery. Excercise that stretches the affected muscle is the usual treatment. May also be neurological problem that affects the nerves on one side of the head.
RICE
Acronym for rest,ice, compression, elevation. THe standard treatment pulled muscle, or excessively stretched tendons or ligamnets.
Quadriceps and hamstring strains
Also called quad and hamstring pulls, these conditions involve tearing these muscles of their tendons ; happen mainly in atheletes who do not warm up properly and then fully extend their hip or knee. Not painful at first, but pian intesifies within 3 to 6 hours. After an intial rest period, stretching is the best therapy.
Hernia
An abnormal protusion of abdominal contents through a weak point in the muscles of the abdominal wall. Most often caused by increased intra-abdominal pressure during lifting or straining. The hernia penetrates the muscle wall but not the skin and so appears as visible bulge in the body surface, Common abdominal hernias include inguinal and umbilical hernias.
Myopathy
Any disease of a muscle.
Shin splints
Common term for pai nin the anterior compartement of the leg caused by irritation of the tibialis anterior muscle as might follow extreme or unusual excercise without adequate prior conditioning. Because it is tightly wrapped by fascia, the inflammed tibialis anterior cuts off its own circulation as it swells and presses painfully on its own nerves.
Strain
Commonly called a "pulled muscle" a strain ix excessive stretching and possible tearing of a muslce due to muscle overuse or abuse. The injured muscle becomes painfully inflamed and adjacent joints are usually immobilized.
What are the characteristics of muscular dystrophy?
Muscle weakness that begins in the hips, pelvis, and legs. Difficulty standing. Trouble learning to sit independently and walk. Unsteady, waddling gait. Walking on the toes or balls of the feet. Clumsiness, falling often. Trouble climbing stairs.
Myalgia
Muslce pain resulting form any muscle disorder.
Myofascial pain syndrome
Pain caused by a tightened bad of muscle fibers, which twitch when the skin over them is touched. Mostly associated with overused or strained postural muscles.
Charley horse
Painful muscle spasm that results from musle strain or contusion, i.e, tearing of muscle followed by bleeding into the tissues (hematoma) and severe, prolonged pain. A coomon contact sports injury; football players frequently suffer a charley horse of the quadriceps muscles of the thigh.
period of relaxation
Phase of contraction; period during which more crossbridges detach than reattach to thin filaments.
period of contraction
Phase of contraction; period of force generation.
latent period
Phase of contraction; time between muscle fiber stimulation and measurement of force generation.
Hernia
Prostitution of an organ through its body cavity wall. May be cogential, but most often is caused by heavy lifting or obesity and subsequent muscle weakening.
Electromyography
Recording and interpretation of graphic records of the electrical activity of contracting muscles. Electrodes inserted into the muscles record the impulses that pass over muscle cell memebranes to stimulate contraction. The best technique for determing the functions or muscles and muscle groups.
Tennis elbow
Tenderness due to truama or overuse of the tendon of origin of the forearm extensor muscle at the laterla epicondyle of the humerus. Cause and exaggerated when the muscles contract forcefully to extend the hand and wrist--as in executin a tennis backhand or lifting a loaded snow shovel. Despite its name, tennis elbow does not involve the elbow joint; most cases caused by work activities.
Which filaments are composed of myosin?
Thick Filaments
fascicle
a bundle of structures, such as nerve or muscle fibers or conducting vessels in plants
myoglobin
a red protein containing heme that carries and stores oxygen in muscle cells. It is structurally similar to a subunit of hemoglobin
epimysium
a sheath of fibrous elastic tissue surrounding a muscle.
What is a sarcomere?
a structural unit of a myofibril in striated muscle, consisting of a dark band and the nearer half of each adjacent pale band.
deltoid
abducts, flexes, extends arm
glutues medius
abducts, medially rotates thigh
gracilis
adducts thigh; flexes and medially rotates leg
fibromyalgia
also known as fibromyositis; a group of conditions involving chronic inflammation of a muscle, its connective tissue coverings and tendons, and capsules of nearby joints. Symptoms are nonspecific trigger points, as well as fatigue and frequent awakening from sleep.
Orbicularis oculi
closes eyelid
masseter
closes jaw
Orbicularis Oris
closes lip (kissingamd whistling muscle)
external oblique
compresses abdomen; rotates trunk
internal oblique
compresses abdomen; rotates trunk
rectus abdominis
compresses abdomen; rotates trunk
transversus abdominis
compresses abdomen; rotates trunk
genioglossus
depresses and protrudes tongue
sternohyoid
depresses hyoid bone and larynx
tibialis anterior
dorsiflexes and inverts foot
external and internal
draws ribs together; aid in inspiration
extensor digitorum
extends and abducts fingers
extensor carpi radialis longus
extends and abducts wrist
extensor carpi ulnaris
extends and abducts wrist
vastus lateralis
extends and stabilizes knee
extensor hallucis longus
extends great toe; dorsiflexes foot
glutues maximus
extends laterally, rotates andabducts
vastus medialis
extends leg at knee
rectus femoris
extends leg at knee; flexes thigh at hip
semitendinous
extends thigh at hip; flexes knee; medially rotates leg
biceps femoris
extends thigh at hip; flexes leg at the knee
semimembranosus
extends thigh;flexes knee; medially rotates leg
pollicis
extends thumb
extensor digitorium longus
extends toe
latissimus dorsi
extends, adducts, rotates arm medially
triceps brachii
extends,adducts forearm
teres major
extends,rotates, adducts humerus
brachioradialis
flexes arm
biceps brachii
flexes elbow joint; supinates forearm
brachialis
flexes forearm
palmaris longus
flexes wrist
flexor digitorum superficials
flexes wrist and middle phalanges of fingers
flexor carpi radialis
flexes wrist;abducts hand
flexor carpi ulnaris
flexes wrist;abducts hand
pectinues
flexes, adducts, medially roates thigh
pectoralis major
flexes, adducts, rotates arm
sartorius
flexes,abducts, and laterally rotates thigh; flexes knee
T-tubules
is a deep invagination of the sarcolemma, which is the plasma membrane of skeletal muscle and cardiac muscle cells.
sarcolemma
is the cell membrane of a striated muscle fiber cell.
endomysium
meaning within the muscle, is a wispy layer of areolar connective tissue that ensheaths each individual myocyte (muscle fiber, or muscle cell).
serratus anterior
moves scapula forward
isotonic contraction
muscular contraction against resistance in which the length of the muscle changes.
isometric contraction
muscular contraction against resistance in which the length of the muscle remains the same
fibularis longus
plantar flexes and everts foot
flexor hallucis longus
plantar flexes and inverts foot
soleus
plantar flexes foot
gastrocnemius
plantar flexes foot and leg
diaphragm
prime mover of inspiration
pronator teres
pronates forearm
occipitalis
pulls scalp posteriorly
Frontalis
raises eyebrows; wrinkles forehead skin
Zygomaticus
raises lateral corners of mouth upward(smiling muscle)
temporalis
raises mandible; closes jaw
trapezius
raises,retracts, and rotates scapula
What is the major function of the sarcoplasmic reticulum in muscle contraction?
regulate intracelleular calcium concentration
styloglossus
retracts and elevates tongue
sternocleidomastoid
rotates head
infraspinatus
rotates humerus
What creates the striations in skeletal muscle cells?
sarcomeres
Platysma
sheet muscle; facial expressions; depresses mandible; wrinkles skin
What type of muscle cells have the greatest ability to regenerate?
smooth muscle cells
What affects the strength or force of skeletal muscle contraction?
the degree of muscle stretch
Ruptured calacneal tendon
the largest and strongest tendon in the body, its rupture is suprisingly common, particularly in older people as a result of stumbling and young sprinters when the tendon is traumatized durong takeoff. The rupture is followed by abrupt pain; a gap is seen just above the heel,and the calg bulges as the triceps surae are realeased from their insertion. Plantar flexion is weak or impossible, but dorsiflexion is exaggerated. Usually repaired surgically.
perimysium
the sheath of connective tissue surrounding a bundle of muscle fibers.