Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Muscular fibres. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Muscular fibres. Mostrar todas las entradas

lunes, 22 de mayo de 2017

Locomotor System: Muscular Function

Introduction
Muscles are responsible for providing the bodily movements. There are also muscles that do not move bones, but provide involuntary movements of internal organs, such as the peristaltic movements of the intestine and the contraction of blood vessels. Finally, when the muscles contract they produce heat (consuming energy).
There are three different types of muscle: smooth, cardiac and skeletal. When we are talking about the locomotor system, however, we are only referring to skeletal muscles, that provide general movements of the skeleton.
The muscular system is an important part of our body. It is 40 % of our total weight.
Structure of muscular fibres
All the skeletal muscles are surrounded by a layer made up of connective tissue called epimysium. The muscle is divided into fascicles by a connective membrane called perimysium. The fascicles are made up of several cells called muscular fibre. Each muscular fibre is surrounded by a thin connective membrane called endomysium. These three membranes join at the edge of the muscle. After the fusion of these membranes, the connective tissue becomes richer in elastic and cartilaginous fibres, forming the tendon. The tendon firmly connects the muscle to the bone.
Skeletal muscle.
The muscle cells that make up the skeletal muscles, called myocytes, are cylindrical and extremely long. Indeed, they can be more than five centimetres long. They have many nuclei, even more than one hundred nuclei per cell.