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Cheatography

13.9 Voluntary and Involuntary Muscles Cheat Sheet (DRAFT) by

involuntary and voluntary muscles

This is a draft cheat sheet. It is a work in progress and is not finished yet.

Types of Muscle

Skeletal Muscle
Make up the bulk of body muscle tissue. Respon­sible for movement.
Cardiac Muscle
Found only in the heart. Myogenic, meaning they contract without a need for a nervous stimulus, causing the heart to beat in a regular rhythm.
Involu­ntary Muscle (aka smooth muscle)
Involu­ntary muscle cells are found in many parts of the body. They can be found in the walls of hollow organs such as the stomach and bladder. Also found in the walls of blood vessels and the digestive tract, where through perist­alsis they more food along the gut.
 

Skeletal Muscle- key facts!

Striated
Voluntary control
Regularly arranged so muscle contracts in one direction
Rapid contra­ction speed
Short length of contra­ction

Cardiac Muscle- key facts!

Specia­lised striated
Involu­ntary movement
Cells branch and interc­onnect, resulting in simult­aneous contra­ction
Interm­ediate contra­ction speed
Interm­ediate length of contra­ction

Involu­ntary Muscle - key facts!

Non-st­riated
Involu­ntary control
No regular arrang­ement, different cells can contract in different directions
Slow contra­ction speed
Can remain contracted for a relatively long time
 

Structure of Skeletal Muscle - Muscle Fibres

-Bundles of muscle fibres which are enclosed in the sarcol­emma.
-Contain lots of nuclei and are much longer than normal cells, as they are formed as a result of many individual embryonic muscle cells fusing together. This makes the muscle stronger as the junction between adjacet cells would act as a point of weakness.
-Shared cytplasm is called the saroplasm.
-Parts of the sarcolemma fold inwards (T tubules) to help spread electrical impulses throughout the sarcop­lasm. This ensures that the whole of the fibre receives the impulse to contract