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Muscle Types
Cardiac
Cardiac muscles are involuntary and found only in the heart. They are controlled by the lower section of the brain called the medulla oblungata, which controls involuntary action throughout your body. Your heart cells come in long strips, each containing a single nucleus, one of the key factors in determining which of the three classes any particular muscle is. Located at the walls of the heart, its main function is to propel blood into circulation. Contraction of the cardiac tissue is caused by an impulse sent from the medulla oblungata to the SA nerve located at the right atrium.
Smooth
Your smooth muscles, like your cardiovascular muscles, are involuntary. They make up your internal organs, such as your stomach-hyper link, throat-hyper link, small intestine-hyper link, and all the others, except your heart.
Unlike cardiovascular muscles, smooth muscles are generally spherical, as most other human cells are, and each contains one nucleus.
Skeletal
The skeletal muscles are the only voluntary muscles of your
body, and make up what we call the muscular system. They are all the muscles
that move you bones and show external movement.
Unlike either of the other two classes, skeletal muscles contain multiple
nuclei because of its large size, being in strips up to a couple of feet long.
Muscular System
The muscles we have in our body are divided into three classes of muscles: cardiac, smooth, and skeletal. Usually, when we think of muscular system we often only remember the skeletal muscles because they make up what is recognized as the muscular system. The muscular system, composed of over 600 muscles, come in a variety of shapes and forms. Differences between each muscle are recognized by location, function, structure, and the way they are contracted
Muscle-Bone interactions LEVER SYSTEM
A lever is a rigid bar on which a given load is moved with
supporting help from a fulcrum. A fulcrum is a fixed point on which lever can
move in different ways or angles. The whole muscular system interacts in this
kind of way with the skeletal system-hyperlink. Given a load the muscles pull
the bone up or in any direction against the load. Your joints-hyperlink usually
seem to be the fulcrum on which you move the lever or bone.
Skeletal muscles can be broken down into groups based upon the type of movement
they portray. The movement of the muscle is based upon the type of joint upon
which the muscle works. Skeletal muscles can't expand, or make themselves
longer, but they can contract, or make themselves shorter, so they generally
work in pairs. One contracts, and in doing so stretches the other, and reverses
its effects on the joint. For example, when you contract your major arm muscle,
which is called the bicep, in return the lower arm muscle, called the tricep,
extends. So as you contract one muscle the other one extends. These effects can
be broken down into groups of their own: flexors, extensors, adductors, and
abductors. Flexors and extensors become plantarflexors and dorsiflexors,
respectively, when located within either the wrist or ankle joints.
Flexors
Flexors bend at the joint, decreasing the interior angle of the joint .The bracius humorous, or bicep, is a flexor of the elbow joint, bringing the fist towards the shoulder. If a flexor appears in either the wrist or ankle joints, it becomes a plantarflexor
Extendors
Opposites of flexors, extensors unbend at the joint, increasing the interior angle. The tracius humorous, or tricep, is an extensor of the elbow joint, taking the fist farther away from the shoulder. If an extensor is found in the wrist or ankle joints, it becomes a dorsiflexor
Abductors take away from the body, like lifting the arm to the side. Abd- means to take away, like abduct and abdicate. Spreading out your fingers uses abductors, because you are taking away your fingers from an imaginary line running down your arm
Adductors, the opposites of abductors, move toward the body. Add- means to increase or include. By lowing an arm raised to the side, or moving your fingers together while keeping them straight, your muscles are adducting.
Tendons and Ligaments
As fascinating as they are, muscles alone can't do the job.
At every joint, tendons and ligaments also help out. Muscles wouldn't be very
useful alone because they don't directly connect to the bone, so even if they
contract, they wouldn't be moving anything. Instead, muscles are connected to
tendons, when themselves are connected to the bones. When the muscles contract,
they pull on the tendons, which in turn pull on the muscles, and that causes
movement.
But without ligaments, that movement wouldn't be too useful because it would
not be directed movement. Without ligaments, instead of bones bending or
rotating about each other when muscles contract, they would slide by each other.
Ligaments are what hold the bones together. They connect at the ends of muscles
and keep them from slipping and sliding, and force them to bend.
Major Skeletal Muscles
The muscular body is divide into ten different areas where muscles can be found: facial, neck, shoulder, arm, forearm, thorax, abdomen, hip, pelvis/thigh, leg.
Facial
In the facial are one finds all the muscles which move the face. Orbicularis oculi-sound are the two muscles that move the eye are. Frontalis-sound and Temporalis-sound are the two muscles which move the forehead and sides of your head. Zygomaticus-sound and Masseter-sound are the two muscles that work in conjunction to move your jaw and upper lip area. Orbicularis oris-sound is the muscle which moves your lips.
Neck
The neck area is almost entirely moved by the sternohyoid-sound and Sternocleidomastoid-sound. These muscles allow the neck to move your head left and right. They work with the platysma muscle to control how far you can move your head left and right. What allows your head to move up and down is the trapezius-sound. The trapezius is so large that it extend down to the shoulder and thorax area. The trapezius is a good example of how some muscles are named by their shape. the trapezius looks just like a trapezoid.
Shoulder
A group of muscles all work together to move the whole shoulder area. This group takes into account the trapezius-sound, deltoid-sound, infraspinatus-sound, teres major-sound, and the rhomboid major-sound. The rhomboid major is called so because its shaped like the geometric shape of a rhombus. Along with the help of the ball and socket joint-hyperlink in your shouder.
Arm
Most known amongst teenage weight lifters is the arm area. The famous bicep brachii-sound is the muscle that allows you to bring your forearm close to your body and form a huge ball of muscle which catches a lot of attention amongst weight lifters. The tricep brachii-sound and brachialis-sound are the two other muscles located in the arm region. These muscles allow a person to do push-ups!
Forearm
A majority of the muscle in the forearm help control a part of the arm. Amongst these is the Berachiodialis major-sound, palmaris longus-sound, and Flexor carpi radialis-sound. The name of the flexor carpi radialis is a good example of how muscles are named by their function and location. This muscle is named carpi because of the bones that it helps move, the carples. Also, the name of radialis is made by the bone that its attached to, the radius.
Thorax
The thorax is the set of muscles which carrying your head,
arms, stomach, and any other upper body areas. These muscles are the
trapezius-sound and latissimus dorsi-sound. Usually, the majority of the
muscles of the thorax can be damaged easily is one does not stretch before
exercise, or lifts a heave load.
Abdomen
The abdominal area consists of the muscles that allows you
to bend down and move your waist from side to side. The internal oblique-sound
and external oblique-sound are the muscles that move your body from left to
right. The Transversus abdominus-sound and Rectus abdominus-sound, along with
the trapezius-sound an latissimus dorsi-sound allow you to bend down and grab
objects.
Hip
Only two muscles make up the hip area. These are the gluteus
medius-sound and gluteus maximus-sound. Probably the laziest muscles in the
whole system the gluteus set of muscles are used only to sit down on.
Pelvis/Thigh
An overlapping of muscles is what makes this area so firm. The pelvis area is usually referred to as the upper part of the leg. Muscles like the pectineus-sound and illiopsoas-sound , which help support the upper leg area are known as pelvic muscles. Thigh muscles are very rich in capillaries and support the whole body. The upper thigh muscles are abductor longus-sound, Gracilis-sound, Sartorius-sound, and Tensor fasciae latea. The lower thigh muscles are rectus femoris-sound, vastus lateralis-sound and medialis-sound. Located in the back of your leg are the hamstrings-sound.
Leg
Helping the thigh region support the body is the leg region.
These muscles like the Gastrocnemius-sound, soleus-sound, porenius
longus-sound, and Tibialis anterior-sound absorb the impact when one walks and
runs. They also give better coordination for moving. The thigh region trust the
body forward while the leg region coordinates where it should be thrusted and
where it should stand.
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