This document provides instructions for an exercise on the gross anatomy of the muscular system. It includes an advance preparation section instructing students to order ATP muscle kits to be delivered no more than seven days before the lab. The kits provide materials for examining muscle contraction. It also notes that extra chemical solutions and pre-cutting the muscle bundles can reduce waiting time. The rest of the document consists of a review sheet with multiple choice and fill-in-the-blank questions about the skeletal muscle system, including muscle identification, origins/insertions, and actions.
This document provides instructions for an exercise on the gross anatomy of the muscular system. It includes an advance preparation section instructing students to order ATP muscle kits to be delivered no more than seven days before the lab. The kits provide materials for examining muscle contraction. It also notes that extra chemical solutions and pre-cutting the muscle bundles can reduce waiting time. The rest of the document consists of a review sheet with multiple choice and fill-in-the-blank questions about the skeletal muscle system, including muscle identification, origins/insertions, and actions.
This document provides instructions for an exercise on the gross anatomy of the muscular system. It includes an advance preparation section instructing students to order ATP muscle kits to be delivered no more than seven days before the lab. The kits provide materials for examining muscle contraction. It also notes that extra chemical solutions and pre-cutting the muscle bundles can reduce waiting time. The rest of the document consists of a review sheet with multiple choice and fill-in-the-blank questions about the skeletal muscle system, including muscle identification, origins/insertions, and actions.
This document provides instructions for an exercise on the gross anatomy of the muscular system. It includes an advance preparation section instructing students to order ATP muscle kits to be delivered no more than seven days before the lab. The kits provide materials for examining muscle contraction. It also notes that extra chemical solutions and pre-cutting the muscle bundles can reduce waiting time. The rest of the document consists of a review sheet with multiple choice and fill-in-the-blank questions about the skeletal muscle system, including muscle identification, origins/insertions, and actions.
The passage discusses the structure and function of skeletal muscles, including their microscopic organization, contraction mechanism, and some examples of major muscles.
The three types of connective tissue wrappings of a skeletal muscle are endomysium, perimysium, and epimysium.
Acetylcholine is the neurotransmitter released at the neuromuscular junction that causes the permeability of muscle cells to change, allowing sodium ions to diffuse in and generate an action potential for contraction.
64 Exercise 11
Advance PreparationATP Muscle Kit
1. Order the ATP muscle kits (Carolina) to be delivered no more than seven days before the lab. One kit provides generously for eight students. Extra vials of the chemical solu- tions can be ordered separately (Carolina) and will reduce waiting time. Just before the lab begins, cut the muscle bundles into 2-centimeter lengths and place in a petri dish in the accompanying glycerol. 65 NAME ____________________________________ LAB TIME/DATE _______________________ E X E R C I S E R E V I E W S H E E T 11 Skeletal Muscle Cells and Their Packaging into Muscles 1. From the inside out, name the three types of connective tissue wrappings of a skeletal muscle. a. b. c. Why are the connective tissue wrappings of skeletal muscle important? (Give at least three reasons.) 2. Why are there more indirectthat is, tendinousmuscle attachments than direct muscle attachments? (Your text may help you answer this.) 3. On the following figure, label endomysium, perimysium, epimysium, and fascicle. Microscopic Anatomy and Organization of Skeletal Muscle Tendons provide durability and conserve space. They are tough collagen fibers so they can cross rough, bony projections that would tear delicate muscle tissues. Because of their small size, more tendons can pass over a joint. They support and bind muscle fibers, strengthen the muscle as a whole, and provide a route for the entry and exit of nerves and blood vessels that serve the muscle fibers. epimysium perimysium endomysium Blood vessel Muscle fiber (cell) Fascicle (wrapped by perimysium) Endomysium (between fibers) Perimysium Epimysium Bone Tendon 66 Review Sheet 11 4. The diagram illustrates a small portion of a muscle myofibril in a highly simplified way. Using terms from the key, correctly identify each structure indicated by a leader line or a bracket. Below the diagram make a sketch of how this segment of the myofibril would look if contracted. Key: actin filament myosin filament Aband sarcomere I band Z disc The Neuromuscular Junction 5. For skeletal muscle cells to contract, they must be excited by motor neurons. However, the electrical impulse cannot pass di- rectly from a nerve cell to the skeletal muscle cells to excite them. Just what does pass from the neuron to the muscle cells, and what effect does it produce? 6. Why is it that the electrical impulse cannot pass from neuron to muscle cell? The neuron and muscle fiber membranes, close as they are, do not actually touch. They are separated by a small fluid-filled gap called the synaptic cleft. A neurotransmitter chemical called acetylcholine diffuses from the axon into the synaptic cleft and combines with the receptors on the muscle cells. The permeability of the muscle cells change, allowing more sodium ions to diffuse into the muscle fiber, resulting in the generation of an action potential. A band I band actin filament Z disc myosin filament sarcomere 67 Review Sheet 11 Classification of Skeletal Muscles 7. Several criteria were given for the naming of muscles. Match the muscle names (column B) to the criteria (column A). Note that more than one muscle may fit the criterion in some cases. Column A 1. action of the muscle 2. shape of the muscle 3. location of the origin and/or insertion of the muscle 4. number of origins 5. location of the muscle relative to a bone or body region 6. direction in which the muscle fibers run relative to some imaginary line 7. relative size of the muscle 8. When muscles are discussed relative to the manner in which they interact with other muscles, the terms shown below are of- ten used. Define each term. Antagonist: Fixator: Prime mover: Synergist: Column B pectoralis major flexor digitorum superficialis biceps brachii abdominis transversus erector spinae deltoid rectus abdominis external intercostals biceps brachii erector spinae abdominis transversus pectoralis major external intercostals pectoralis major rectus abdominis abdominis transversus biceps brachii pectoralis major flexor digitorum superficialis deltoid muscles that oppose or reverse a movement specialized synergists that immobilize the origin of a prime mover muscles that are primarily responsible for producing a particular movement aid the action of agonists by reducing undesirable/unnecessary movement 69 12 Gross Anatomy of the Muscular System E X E R C I S E Time Allotment: 23 hours in lab plus time outside of lab. Multimedia Resources: See Appendix Afor a list of multimedia resource distributors. Anatomy of a Runner (Structure and Function of the Lower Limb) (UL, 38 minutes, VHS) Abdomen and Pelvis (UL, 16 minutes, VHS) Human Musculature Videotape (BC, 23 minutes, VHS) Lower Extremity (UL, WNS, 28 minutes, VHS) Major Skeletal Muscles and their Actions (UL, 19 minutes, VHS) Muscles (FHS, 20 minutes, VHS, DVD) The New Living Body: Muscles (FHS, 20 minutes, VHS, DVD) Advance Preparation 1. Set out models of the human torso and upper and lower limbs. It helps to have the mus- cles labeled on some of the models. Have model keys available. 2. Set out anatomical charts of human musculature. 3. Set out tubes of body (or face) paint and 1-inch wide brushes. 71 NAME ____________________________________ LAB TIME/DATE _______________________ E X E R C I S E R E V I E W S H E E T 12 Muscles of the Head and Neck 1. Using choices from the list at the right, correctly identify the muscles provided with leader lines on the diagram. buccinator frontalis masseter platysma occipitalis orbicularis oculi orbicularis oris zygomaticus 2. Using the terms provided above, identify the muscles described next. 1. used to grin 2. important muscle to a saxophone player 3. used in blinking and squinting 4. used to pout (pulls the corners of the mouth downward) 5. raises your eyebrows for a questioning expression 6. your kisser 7. allows you to bite that carrot stick 8. tenses skin of the neck during shaving Gross Anatomy of the Muscular System Galea aponeurotica frontalis occipitalis zygomaticus orbicularis oris platysma masseter buccinator zygomaticus buccinator orbicularis oculi platysma frontalis orbicularis oris masseter platysma orbicularis oculi 72 Review Sheet 12 Muscles of the Trunk and Upper Limb 3. Using choices from the key, identify the major muscles described next: 1. a major spine flexor 2. prime mover for pulling the arm posteriorly 3. elbow extender , 4. help form the abdominal girdle , (four pairs of muscles) 5. extends and adducts wrist 6. allows you to raise your arm laterally , 7. shoulder adductors (two muscles) 8. flexes elbow; supinates the forearm 9. small muscles between the ribs; elevate the ribs during breathing 10. extends the head 11. extends the spine 12. extends and abducts the wrist Key: biceps brachii deltoid erector spinae extensor carpi radialis extensor carpi ulnaris extensor digitorum superficialis external intercostals external oblique flexor carpi radialis internal oblique latissimus dorsi pectoralis major rectus abdominis transversus abdominis trapezius triceps brachii rectus abdominis latissimus dorsi triceps brachii rectus abdominis external oblique pectoralis major erector spinae erector spinae extensor carpi radialis biceps brachii external intercostals latissimus dorsi extensor carpi ulnaris deltoid transversus abdominis internal oblique 73 Review Sheet 12 Muscles of the Lower Limb 4. Use the key terms to respond to the descriptions below. 1. lateral compartment muscle that plantar flexes and everts the ankle 2. forms the buttock 3. a prime mover of ankle plantar flexion 4. a prime mover of ankle dorsiflexion 5. allow you to grip a horses back with your thighs , 6. muscles that insert into the tibial tuberosity (two choices) 7. muscle that extends knee and flexes thigh General Review: Muscle Descriptions 5. Identify the muscles described below by completing the statements: 1. , , and are commonly used for intramuscular injections (three muscles). 2. The insertion tendon of the group contains a large sesamoid bone, the patella. 3. The triceps surae insert in common into the tendon. 4. The bulk of the tissue of a muscle tends to lie to the part of the body it causes to move. 5. The extrinsic muscles of the hand originate on the . 6. Most flexor muscles on the aspect of the body; most extensors are located . An exception to this generalization is the extensor-flexor musculature of the . Key: adductor group biceps femoris gastrocnemius gluteus maximus fibularis longus rectus femoris semimembranosus semitendinosus tibialis anterior tibialis posterior vastus muscles fibularis longus gluteus maximus gastrocnemius tibialis anterior adductor group rectus femoris deltoid vasti quadriceps calcaneal proximal humerus, radius, and ulna anterior posteriorly knee gluteus maximus and medius rectus femoris vastus muscles 74 Review Sheet 12 General Review: Muscle Recognition 6. Identify the lettered muscles in the diagram of the human anterior superficial musculature by matching the letter with one of the following muscle names: 1. orbicularis oris 2. pectoralis major 3. external oblique 4. sternocleidomastoid 5. biceps brachii 6. deltoid 7. vastus lateralis 8. frontalis 9. rectus femoris 10. rectus abdominis 11. sartorius 12. platysma 13. flexor carpi radialis 14. orbicularis oculi 15. gastrocnemius 16. masseter 17. trapezius 18. tibialis anterior 19. adductors 20. vastus medialis 21. transversus abdominis 22. fibularis longus 23. iliopsoas 24. temporalis 25. zygomaticus 26. triceps brachii d e f g h i j k l m n o p a q r s t u v x w y z aa bb cc dd b c 27. brachialis 28. extensor digitorum longus 29. internal oblique 30. soleus t v x u g e l q k w aa c i r cc b d p bb m z n j a s f h o y dd
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