Title: Unit 7 Objectives
1Unit 7 Objectives
1. Describe the properties and functions of
muscle tissue. (p. 178) 2. Describe the
organization of muscle at the tissue level. (p.
178) 3. Identify the structural components of a
sarcomere. (pp. 179182) 4. Explain the key
steps involved in the contraction of a skeletal
muscle fiber. (pp. 182184) 5. Compare the
different types of muscle contractions. (pp.
187189) 6. Describe the mechanisms by which
muscles obtain and use energy to power
contractions. (pp. 189192) 7. Relate types of
muscle fibers to muscular performance. (pp.
193195) 8. Distinguish between aerobic and
anaerobic endurance and explain their
implications for muscular performance. (p. 192)
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth
muscles in terms of structure and function. (pp.
194195) 10. Identify the principal axial
muscles of the body together with their origins
and insertions. (pp. 199204) 11. Identify the
principal appendicular muscles of the body,
together with their origins and insertions. (pp.
204216) 12. Describe the effects of exercise
and aging on muscle tissue. (p. 216)
2Unit 7
1. Describe the properties and functions of
muscle tissue. (p. 178)
3Unit 7
1. Describe the properties and functions of
muscle tissue. (p. 178)
The integrated action of joints, bones, nerves
and skeletal muscles
- Produces movements such as walking, running,
facial expressions, eye movements, and
respiration. - Maintains posture, joint stability.
- Supports, protect and encloses vital organs.
- Helps to maintain body temperature by producing
heat. - Guards the gates into and out of our bodies
(ex. The iris of the eye).
4Unit 7
2. Describe the organization of muscle at the
tissue level. (p. 178)
Muscle Organization I
Muscle Organization II
Muscle Organization III
5Unit 7
2. Describe the organization of muscle at the
tissue level. (p. 178)
Movement is attained due to a muscle moving an
attached bone.
DUH!
Origin
Muscle Contracting
Tendon
Insertion
6Unit 7
2. Describe the organization of muscle at the
tissue level. (p. 178)
Bone
Perimysium
Blood Vesseles
Muscle Fiber
Fascicle
Tendon
Epimysium
Endomysium
Gross Anatomy of Skeletal Muscle
7Unit 7
3. Identify the structural components of a
sarcomere. (pp. 179182)
8Unit 7
3. Identify the structural components of a
sarcomere. (pp. 179182)
Sarcomere
sarcolemma
Myofibril
Nuclei
9Unit 7
3. Identify the structural components of a
sarcomere. (pp. 179182)
Myonuclei identified along the length of an
isolated muscle fiber.
- Because a muscle fiber is not a single cell, its
parts are often given special names such as - Sarcolemma for plasma membrane
- Sarcoplasmic reticulum for endoplasmic
reticulum - Sarcosome for mitochondrion
- Sarcoplasm for cytoplasm
10Unit 7
3. Identify the structural components of a
sarcomere. (pp. 179182)
Motor Neuron
Skeletal Muscle Contractile Unit
Sarcoplasmic reticulum
Action Potential
Myofibrils
Transverse or T-Tube
Z-Line
Sarcomere
11Unit 7
3. Identify the structural components of a
sarcomere. (pp. 179182)
Z-Line
Skeletal Muscle Contractile Unit
Sarcomere
Actin
Myosin
12Unit 7
3. Identify the structural components of a
sarcomere. (pp. 179182)
Skeletal Muscle Contractile Unit
Sarcomere
Actin
Myosin
Z-Line
I Band Thin
A Band Thick
13Unit 7
3. Identify the structural components of a
sarcomere. (pp. 179182)
Skeletal Muscle Contractile Unit Terms
I-bands (isotropic) contain only thin
myofilaments.
iso- means equal , tropic- means turning
A-bands (anisotropic) contain both thin and
thick myofilaments.
an- means without
Z-line (German for Zwischenscheiben, meaning
between disks)
M-line (German for Mitte, meaning middle)
14Unit 7
3. Identify the structural components of a
sarcomere. (pp. 179182)
Changes in Skeletal Muscle Contractile Unit
Band/Line Contracted Muscle Stretched Muscle
? ?
? ?
? ?
No Change
No Change
A-band
I-band
Shortens
Lengthens
Moves closer together
Moves further apart
Z-line
15Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Muscle Contraction Animation
Contraction of skeletal muscle
Muscle Contraction Movie
Cross Bridging Cycle
Muscle Contraction Animation
Overview
16Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Tension
?
?
Resistance
?
?
Contraction
17Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Quick Facts
- Every skeletal muscle fiber is under the direct
control by a neuron at a neural muscular
junction. - When an action potential arrives at a neural
muscular junction and is transferred across the
sarcolemma, the contraction process begins. - When an action potential reaches a muscle fiber
it will cause Ca2 ions to seep out of the
sarcoplasmic reticulum into the myofibrils
starting contraction.
18Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Neural Control of Muscle Contraction
19Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Step 1 Release of Acetylcholine (ACh)
20Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Step 2 Ach Binding at Motor End Plate
Na
Na
Na
Sarcolemma membrane becomes permeable to Na
Na
Na
Na
21Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Step 3 Action Potential Conduction by
Sarcolemma
22Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Synapse
Neuromuscular Junction
23Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Molecular Events of the Contraction Process
Myosin Fiber Head
Actin subunits fiber
Tropomyosine
Troponin
Active Myosin-Actin Cross-bridge Attachment
site (in the absence of Ca2)
Inside a sacromere at rest
24Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Step 1 Active-site exposure
Ca2 binds to Troponin
Tropomyosine slides off the active site
Ca2
Active Myosin-Actin Cross-bridge Attachment
site is uncovered
Ca2
Ca2 released from the Sacroplasmic Reticulum
arrives at the sacromere.
25Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Step 2 Cross-bridge Attachment
Attachment of myosin head to exposed active site
on the thin filament of the actin fiber
Ca2
Ca2
26Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Step 3 Pivoting of myosin head
Myosin heads releases ADP and P resulting in a
pivoting of the head toward the center of the
sacromere
The myosine head pivot action thrusts the actin
fiber to the left contracting the sacromere by a
small amount
Ca2
Ca2
27Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Step 4 Cross-bridge deattachment
Myosin heads deattachs from the active site on
the actin fiber when it binds with another ATP
ATP
Ca2
Ca2
ATP
ATP can be supplied by aerobic or anaerobic
cellular respiration or via CP?ATP cycle (page
190)
28Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Step 5 Myosin reactivation
Myosin heads Become cocked or reactivated again
as they split ATP into ADP and P and capture the
bond energy that is released
Ca2
Ca2
The entire attachment reattachment contraction
cycle begins again until Ca2 or ATP is removed.
29Unit 7
4. Explain the key steps involved in the
contraction of a skeletal muscle fiber. (pp.
182184)
Review Sliding Filament Cross-Bridge Theory
30Unit 7
5. Compare the different types of muscle
contractions. (pp. 187189)
- ? Frequency of Muscle Fiber Stimulation
- ? Number of Muscle Fibers Involved
- ? Flavors of Contraction Isotonic Isometric
- ? Anti-Contraction Muscle Elongation
31Unit 7
5. Compare the different types of muscle
contractions. (pp. 187189)
Quick Facts
- Muscles are composed of 1,000s of fibers.
- Individual muscle fibers either 100 contracted
or are 100 at rest known as the
all-or-nothing principle - A twitch along a single muscle fiber is a
complete contraction cycle - at rest ? contraction ? at rest
- The recruited more motor units into a
contraction cycle, increases tension. - Repeated stimulation before relaxation results
in more twitchessummation.
32Unit 7
5. Compare the different types of muscle
contractions. (pp. 187189)
Twitch Development of Tension
Ca2 levels drop and cross-bridging declines.
Action Potential Sweeps Across the Sarcolemma.
Cross-bridging begins between myosin and actin.
- Maximum tension
- development
33Unit 7
5. Compare the different types of muscle
contractions. (pp. 187189)
Frequency of Muscle Fiber Stimulation
Stimulation
Summation of twitches increases a muscle
Tension
POWER OUTPUT!
Time
34Unit 7
5. Compare the different types of muscle
contractions. (pp. 187189)
Frequency of Muscle Fiber Stimulation
Maximum Tension
A muscle producing maximum tension through
repeated summation is said to reach a state
called .
Tension
Incomplete tetanus
Time
35Unit 7
5. Compare the different types of muscle
contractions. (pp. 187189)
Frequency of Muscle Fiber Stimulation
SR cant reclaim Ca2 fast enough for relaxation.
Maximum Tension
A muscle producing maximum tension through
repeated summation while not allowing relaxation
is said to reach a state called .
Tension
Complete tetanus
Time
36Unit 7
5. Compare the different types of muscle
contractions. (pp. 187189)
Number of Muscle Fibers Involved
Threshold / Motor Unit
Skeletal Muscle Fascicle
Muscle Fibers / Cells
Motor Unit
37Unit 7
5. Compare the different types of muscle
contractions. (pp. 187189)
Quick Facts
- Muscles at rest maintain a relaxed tension
created by various contracting motor units this
tension, called muscle tone helps maintain our
posture. - If a muscle fiber is not stimulated on a
regular basis is will atrophy, or become
smaller and weaker. - Severe atrophy results in muscle fiber death.
Dead fibers are not replaced.
38Unit 7
5. Compare the different types of muscle
contractions. (pp. 187189)
Quick Facts
- Muscle contractions come in two flavors
- Isotonic contraction a contraction that
results in the shortening of the entire muscle
as it maintains a constant tension before
relaxing. - Isometric contraction caused by a increase of
tension that does not result in the shortening
of the muscle or the moving a joint or any other
oject.
Iso- equal, tonic- tension
Iso- equal, metric- length
39Unit 7
5. Compare the different types of muscle
contractions. (pp. 187189)
Anti-Contraction Muscle Elongation
- Muscle only actively contract !
- Muscles passively relax or elongate or
- Gravity can cause the mass of the contracted,
shorten muscle to drop or elongate during its
relaxation cycle - The memory of elastic connective tissue
surround muscle fibers uncoil after a
contraction - The contraction of an opposing muscle
stretches out its relaxed antagonist.
40Unit 7
6. Describe the mechanisms by which muscles
obtain and use energy to power contractions.
(pp. 189192)
416. Describe the mechanisms by which muscles
obtain and use energy to power contractions. (pp.
189192)
Unit 7
Quick Facts
- Muscle contractions require large amounts of
energy (6 x1014 ATP/sec/muscle fiber) - Most of this energy is generated on-demand.
- ATP is an energy-transfer molecule not an
energy storage molecule. - Resting muscles (RM) transfer the energy stored
in ATP to Creatine forming Creatine Phosphate
(CP) and ADP. CP can then be used to convert ADP
back into ATP on demand. - CP levels in RMs are gt ATP levels.
426. Describe the mechanisms by which muscles
obtain and use energy to power contractions. (pp.
189192)
Unit 7
Quick Facts
- Aerobic cellular respiration in mitochondria is
used to recycle ADP P energy? ATP during
rest through moderate levels of activity. - When muscular activity uses up the available
supplies of oxygen and or ATP and CP, available
energy stored in the fibers glycogen deposits
are converted through glycolysis to form ATP
anaerobically.
436. Describe the mechanisms by which muscles
obtain and use energy to power contractions. (pp.
189192)
Unit 7
ATP Adenosine TriPhosphate
Lifes Rechargeable Battery
Adenine
3 Phosphate Groups
Ribose
446. Describe the mechanisms by which muscles
obtain and use energy to power contractions. (pp.
189192)
Unit 7
Unstable
ATP Adenosine TriPhosphate
LifesRechargeable Battery
Releasing Energy
Trapping Energy
456. Describe the mechanisms by which muscles
obtain and use energy to power contractions. (pp.
189192)
Unit 7
ATP Adenosine TriPhosphate
unstable
Because large amounts of ATP in resting muscle
cells are
excess ATP transfers its third high energy P to
a polypeptide called creatine forming creatine
phosphate or CP.
ATP Creatine
ADP Creatine Phosphate
Creatine Phosphokinase
466. Describe the mechanisms by which muscles
obtain and use energy to power contractions. (pp.
189192)
Unit 7
ATP Adenosine TriPhosphate
ATP
Energy for Muscle Contraction
Energy from Cellular Respiration
Creatine
When Cellular ATP is High
When Cellular ATP is Low
Creatine Phosphate
PO4
PO4
ADP
ATP Cycle ? ADP CP ? ATP
476. Describe the mechanisms by which muscles
obtain and use energy to power contractions. (pp.
189192)
Unit 7
ATP Adenosine TriPhosphate
C-C bond energy in organic molecules can be
released and trapped in molecules of ATP using
the Krebs/ citric acid / tricarboxilic acid
cycle a slower but more efficient aerobic
process. Or
Energy could be released and trapped in molecules
of ATP using glycolysis a quick but less
efficient anaerobic process
These processes prefer C-C bonds found in 1st
Carbohydrates gt 2nd Lipids gt 3rd Proteins
486. Describe the mechanisms by which muscles
obtain and use energy to power contractions. (pp.
189192)
Unit 7
Quick Facts
- Muscle fatigue can be caused by a prolonged
oxygen debt, a by-product of glycolysis, called
lactic acid, a decrease in the pH of the muscle
fiber, or just a lack of ATP. - A period of muscle recovery follows muscle
fatigue, in which pre-fatigue conditions or
pre-exertion level are re-established. - Muscle recovery requires muscular,
cardiovascular and hepatic systems to work
together in order to reach homeostatic levels
after heavy muscular exertion.
49Unit 7
7. Relate types of muscle fibers to muscular
performance. (pp.193195)
8. Distinguish between aerobic and anaerobic
endurance and explain their implications for
muscular performance. (p.192)
50Unit 7
8. Distinguish between aerobic and anaerobic
endurance and explain their implications for
muscular performance. (p. 192)
First some vocabulary
Aerobic
Any process that requires oxygen is said to be an
aerobic process.
Like rusting, fire, or cellular respiration
Anaerobic
Any process that does not require oxygen is said
to be an anaerobic process.
Like fermentation or glycolysis
51Unit 7
8. Distinguish between aerobic and anaerobic
endurance and explain their implications for
muscular performance. (p. 192)
Some more vocabulary
Endurance
The ability to continue a given task.
The amount of time an individual can perform a
task.
Power
The amount of work or energy expended in a given
amount of time.
The maximum amount of tension a muscle group can
produce.
52Unit 7
7. Relate types of muscle fibers to muscular
performance. (pp. 193195)
Type I vs. Type II Fibers
Two different types of muscle fiber can be found
in most skeletal muscles.
Dark vs. White vs. Pink flesh Chicken
vs.Chicken vs. Human Thigh
Breast muscle
- The Type I and Type II fibers differ in their
- Structure,
- Biochemistry and
- Performance
53Unit 7
7. Relate types of muscle fibers to muscular
performance. (pp. 193195)
Type I vs. Type II Fibers
Type I (slow)
Type II a (fast)
Type II b
54Unit 7
7. Relate types of muscle fibers to muscular
performance. (pp. 193195)
- Type I, Red, or Aerobic Muscle Fibers
- Also known as "slow-twitch" fibers, take 3x
longer to contract after stimulation, - Activated by small-diameter, thus
slow- conducting, motor neurons, - Muscles containing many slow-twitch fibers have
Egreater vascular support. - ERich in myoglobin and hence red in color,
- Depend on cellular respiration for ATP
production, contain Emany mitochondria, - EResistant to fatigue, and are dominant in
muscles that are responsible for posture.
55Unit 7
7. Relate types of muscle fibers to muscular
performance. (pp. 193195)
- Type II, White, or Anaerobic Muscle Fibers
- PAlso known as "fast-twitch" fibers,
- PTwice the diameter (more sacromeres) and are
more common then Type I fibers, - Activated by large-diameter, thus
fast- conducting, motor neurons, - Low in myoglobin and rich in glycogen hence are
whitish in color, - Depend on glycolysis for ATP production,
therefore they contain few mitochondria, - Fatigue easily, dominant in muscles used for
rapid and fine motor movements.
Most skeletal muscles contain some mixture of
Type I and Type II fibers, but a single motor
unit always contains one fiber type or the other,
never both.
56Unit 7
8. Distinguish between aerobic and anaerobic
endurance and explain their implications for
muscular performance. (p. 192)
Now we can consider how
Muscular Performance
A measure of how a muscle or muscle group
responds to perform a task of any intensity.
depends upon
- The muscle fiber makeup of the muscle and
- The physical conditioning of the person!
57Unit 7
8. Distinguish between aerobic and anaerobic
endurance and explain their implications for
muscular performance. (p. 192)
Fast Fiber Conditioning
- Improves a muscle or muscle groups ability to
sustain a short -term high tension effort by - Bulking-Up or Increasing the number of
myofibrils in fast-twitch fibers (increasing its
diameter) - ? Increasing the standing supplies of
glycogen/glucose (remembering that these fibers
use glycolysis, an anaerobic reaction)
58Unit 7
8. Distinguish between aerobic and anaerobic
endurance and explain their implications for
muscular performance. (p. 192)
Slow Fiber Conditioning
- Improves a muscle or muscle groups ability to
sustain a long-term low tension effort by - CardioVascular Training increasing the bodies
ability to supply oxygen to the muscles by
increasing lung capacity, RBC count RBC
hemoglobin content. (blood doping) - ? Carbo-Loading preparing for and improving
the bodies ability to elevate the blood glucose
levels on demand (remember, these fibers use
aerobic respiration).
59Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth
muscles in terms of structure and function.
(pp. 194195)
60Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles
in terms of structure and function. (pp. 194195)
- Skeletal
- Moves bones
- Voluntary, capable of great work, but tires
easily - Smooth
- Found around organs, such as the intestines and
stomach - Involuntary, capable of sustained work for very
long periods of time - Cardiac heart beat, capable of sustained work,
mainly involuntary!
61Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles
in terms of structure and function. (pp. 194195)
Muscle Types
Smooth
Cardiac
Skeletal
62Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles
in terms of structure and function. (pp. 194195)
Muscle Type Location
Attached to bone
Heart
Walls of hollow organs blood vessles and glands
63Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles
in terms of structure and function. (pp. 194195)
Muscle Type Cell Shape
Long, cylindrical
Branched
Spindle- shaped
64Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles
in terms of structure and function. (pp. 194195)
Muscle Type Nucleus
Multiple, peripheral
Usually single, central
Single, central
65Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles
in terms of structure and function. (pp. 194195)
Muscle Type Special Features
Intercalated disks
Cell-to-cell attachments
66Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles
in terms of structure and function. (pp. 194195)
Muscle Type Striations
No
Yes
Yes
67Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles
in terms of structure and function. (pp. 194195)
Muscle Type Autorythmic
No
Yes, smooth sustained, rythmic
No
68Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles
in terms of structure and function. (pp. 194195)
Muscle Type Control
Involuntary
Voluntary
Involuntary
69Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles
in terms of structure and function. (pp. 194195)
Muscle Type Function
Heart contraction to propel blood through the
body
Move the whole body
Compression of organs, ducts, glands, etc.
70Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles
in terms of structure and function. (pp. 194195)
Cardiac muscle fibers are
- Smaller (than skeletal)
- Have a single nucleus
- Less extensive T-tubule system
- Myofilaments/fibrils organized as sarcomeres
71Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles
in terms of structure and function. (pp. 194195)
Cardiac muscle fibers
- Have extensive cell-to-cell connections at gap
junctions that - Add strength (the intercalated disks)
- Permits direct transmission of electrical
signals from cell-to-cell (the gap junctions) - Provides its own intrinsic conduction system so
that it does not rely upon a neural action
potential to initiate contraction. - Rate and force of contraction is controlled by
the autonomic nervous system however.
Autonomic nervous system the part of the
nervous system that supplies stimulation to the
involuntary muscles, like the smooth and cardiac
muscles, and to the glands, considered visceral
organs.
72Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles
in terms of structure and function. (pp. 194195)
Smooth muscle fibers
- Are smaller than skeletal and cardiac,
- Occur in bundles/sheets of short fibers,
- Contraction are stimulated and controlled by
the autonomic nervous system. - Do not end in tendons since they dont attach or
pull on bones! - Do not have troponin attached two the actin
fibers - Have an extensive network of gap junctions
between adjacent cells.
73Unit 7
9. Contrast skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles
in terms of structure and function. (pp. 194195)
Smooth muscle fibers
- Rather than organized arrays of thick
- and thin filaments, actin-based thin filaments
and myosin-based thick filaments are dispersed
throughout the cytoplasm in a seemingly random
manner. - The thin filaments are attached to the plasma
membrane and to cytoskeletal elements. - The thick filaments are distributed through the
cytoplasm (like the plastic webbing
in a bag used to package fruit and - vegetables)
74Unit 7
10. Identify the principal axial muscles of the
body together with their origins and
insertions. (pp. 199204)
7510. Identify the principal axial muscles of the
body together with their origins and insertions.
(pp. 199204)
Unit 7
Origins Insertions
- Pretend you were a puppet ?
- Imagine strings attached to your body at the
origins and insertions of skeletal muscles. - Pick a muscle and touch these locations and in
you imagination string that part of your
puppet (you) - What would happen if you pulled the string from
the origins end?
7610. Identify the principal axial muscles of the
body together with their origins and insertions.
(pp. 199204)
Unit 7
Origins Insertions
HINT The largest part of the muscles mass is
closer to the origin of the muscle
7710. Identify the principal axial muscles of the
body together with their origins and insertions.
(pp. 199204)
Unit 7
Sternocleidomastoid
Posterior, Dorsal View
Trapezius
Deltoid
Teres minor
Teres major
Infraspinatus
Latissimus dorsi
7810. Identify the principal axial muscles of the
body together with their origins and insertions.
(pp. 199204)
Unit 7
Masseter
Orbicularis oris
Anterior, Ventral View
Sternocleidomastoid
Deltoid
Pectoralis major
Trapezius
Serratus anterior
External oblique
Rectus abdominis
79Unit 7
11. Identify the principal appendicular muscles
of the body, together with their origins and
insertions. (pp. 204216)
80Unit 7
11. Identify the principal appendicular muscles
of the body, together with their origins and
insertions. (pp. 204216)
Rectus femoralis
Gracilis
Sartorius
Vastus medialis
Anterior, Ventral View
Vastus lateralis
Gastronemius
Fibularis
Soleus
81Unit 7
11. Identify the principal appendicular muscles
of the body, together with their origins and
insertions. (pp. 204216)
Gluteus medius
Gluteus maximus
Gracilis
Abductor magnus
Sartorius
Posterior, Dorsal View
Biceps femoris
Soleus
Gastronemius
82Unit 7
11. Identify the principal appendicular muscles
of the body, together with their origins and
insertions. (pp. 204216)
Tibialis anterior
Gastronemius
Laterial View
Soleus
Fibularis muscle(s)
Extensor digitorum
83Unit 7
11. Identify the principal appendicular muscles
of the body, together with their origins and
insertions. (pp. 204216)
Brachioradius
Flexor carpi ulnaris
Biceps brachii
Anterior View
84Unit 7
11. Identify the principal appendicular muscles
of the body, together with their origins and
insertions. (pp. 204216)
Brachioradius
Triceps brachii
Extensor carpi ulnaris
Extensor carpi radialus
Flexor carpi ulnaris
Extensor digitorum
Posterior View
85Unit 7
12. Describe the effects of exercise and aging
on muscle tissue. (p. 216)
8612. Describe the effects of exercise and aging on
muscle tissue. (p. 216)
Unit 7
87Unit 7