|
1
|
|
|
2
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
4
|
|
|
5
|
- Large muscles
- Maintain posture
- Facilitate locomotion
- Move jointed bones
- Found in antagonistic pairs
- Joined to bones by tendons
|
|
6
|
- Each cell (fibre) is long and cylindrical
- Muscle fibres are multi-nucleated
- Typically 50-60mm in diameter, and up to 10cm long
- The contractile elements of
skeletal muscle cells are
myofibrils
|
|
7
|
- Voluntary movement of skeletal parts
- Spans joints and attached to skeleton
- Multi-nucleated, striated, cylindrical fibres
|
|
8
|
- Main muscle of heart
- Pumping mass of heart
- Critical in humans
- Heart muscle cells behave as one unit
- Heart always contracts to
it’s full extent
|
|
9
|
- Cardiac muscle cells (fibres) are short, branched and interconnected
- Cells are striated & multi-nucleated
- Adjacent cardiac cells joined via electrical synapses (gap junctions)
- These gap junctions appear as dark lines when viewed under LM, and are
called intercalated discs
|
|
10
|
- Found in the heart
- Involuntary rhythmic contraction
- Branched, striated fibre with single nucleus and intercalated discs
|
|
11
|
- Lines walls of viscera
- Found in longitudinal or circular arrangement
- Alternate contraction of circular & longitudinal muscle in the
intestine leads to peristalsis
|
|
12
|
- Spindle shaped uni-nucleated cells
- Striations not observed
- Actin and myosin filaments are present
- Ratio of thin-to-thick filaments is 16:1 (in striated muscle this is
2:1)
- Myosin filaments are attached to
dense bodies at the end of each
cell
|
|
13
|
- Found in walls of hollow internal organs
- Involuntary movement of internal organs
- Elongated, spindle shaped fibre with single nucleus
|
|
14
|
|