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The Muscular System
The Muscular System

... Effects of Exercise on Muscle Aerobics result in stronger muscles due to increase blood supply Muscle fibers increase mitochondria and oxygen storage Muscle becomes more fatigue resistant Heart enlarges to pump more blood to body Does not increase skeletal muscle size ...
File
File

... After 10seconds of intensive exercise creatine phosphate store is depleted and if the intensive exercise continues the cells start to respire anaerobically because they do not receive an adequate supply of oxygen from the blood for aerobic respiration During Anaerobic Respiration, the only stage of ...
Steriods
Steriods

... Effects of steroids on Women  Growth of facial hair  Baldness  Deepened voice ...
Muscle and NerveKD13
Muscle and NerveKD13

... • Has features of both skeletal and smooth muscle - Like skeletal muscle, it has strong contractions and striated appearance - Like smooth muscle, it is under involuntary control and has rhythmic contraction ...
File
File

... • Has features of both skeletal and smooth muscle - Like skeletal muscle, it has strong contractions and striated appearance - Like smooth muscle, it is under involuntary control and has rhythmic contraction ...
Animal form and function
Animal form and function

...  Basal metabolic rate: at rest  Endotherm: 1,600 – 2,000Kcal/day  Maximum rate: can not sustain for long  Use: ATP that’s already present  Then make some anaerobically by glycolysis  Start to break down glycogen in liver and muscle cells ...
Coach Steve Brooks and AdvoCare recommend the following
Coach Steve Brooks and AdvoCare recommend the following

... Add lean muscle mass. Add more protein in your diet without excess fats and carbohydrates. (For an athlete who needs highquality protein to aid your training.) KEY BENEFITS: • 25 grams of high-quality, easily digestible protein • Provides nutritional support for increasing muscle mass. Supports musc ...
Muscular System
Muscular System

... • Non-striated (striations are dark lines of tissue ) ...
Monday Oct
Monday Oct

... Low plasma glucose (hypoglycemia) Dehydration ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... How Muscles and Bones Interact Skeletal muscles are joined to bones by the tendons. Tendons pull on the bones and make them work like levers. ...
Neuromuscular Adaptations to Resistance Training
Neuromuscular Adaptations to Resistance Training

... Left ventricular concentric hypertrophy resulting from resistive training can be accompanied by strengthened myocardium and increased stroke volume at rest and during exercise.  Stroke volume is not significantly increased when it is related to body surface area or lean body mass. ...
Topic 2 PowerPoint
Topic 2 PowerPoint

... - low glycogen content (they also metabolize fatty acids and proteins, which are broken down into the acetyl CoA that enters the Krebs cycle) ...
Document
Document

... Very soon, my muscle cells started to run short of oxygen and acidic carbon dioxide started to build up in the blood. ...
Muscles - practice
Muscles - practice

... Actin and myosin form network. Dense bodies – correspond to Z band (α actinin)  Hemidesmosomes, focal adhesions, gap junctions, pinocytic invagination  Mitochondria, GA and RER  Proteosynthesis (elastin, collagen, renin) ...
control of intermediary metabolism
control of intermediary metabolism

... ACUTE EFFECTS OF INSULIN DEFICIENCY IN DIABETES MELLITUS ...
Muscular Control of Movement - Illinois Wesleyan University
Muscular Control of Movement - Illinois Wesleyan University

... – 85% of max for strength – 75% of max for muscular power + (method) – 50% - 65% of max for muscular endurance ...
Location
Location

... • Has features of both skeletal and smooth muscle - Strong contractions and striated appearance is similar to skeletal muscle - Involuntary control and rhythmic contraction is similar to smooth muscle ...
THE MUSCLE SPINDLE Anatomical Structures of the Spindle
THE MUSCLE SPINDLE Anatomical Structures of the Spindle

... The muscle spindle is a long, thin structure located adjacent and parallel to muscle fibers and is composed of multiple components that have both afferent and efferent innervation (Figures 3-4a and 3-4b). The muscle spindle functions as a stretch receptor and responds to static and dynamic length ch ...
Skeletal Muscle Problems
Skeletal Muscle Problems

... ‘Not all force results in movement.’ • Isotonic - (same force), muscle fibers create a force that moves a load. Muscle shortens or lengthens. ...
Chapter 1
Chapter 1

... 2009 Cengage-Wadsworth ...
Human Body Systems Study Guide
Human Body Systems Study Guide

... The place that 2 bones meet ________ Muscle named for its smooth appearance; found in the stomach _______ A strong, flexible tissue that covers the ends of bones; found in ears and nose ______ The TOP chambers of the heart ________ The BOTTOM chambers of the heart ________ Tiny blood vessels that de ...
Muscle Loss Can Be Slowed With Myostatin Inhibitor
Muscle Loss Can Be Slowed With Myostatin Inhibitor

... With Myostatin Inhibitor NewsUSA ...
The Muscular System
The Muscular System

... – Cells with overactive mTORC1 protein (promotes muscle growth) cannot self-clean ...
Chapter 12 Skeletal and Smooth Muscle part-2
Chapter 12 Skeletal and Smooth Muscle part-2

... Types of smooth muscle cells Smooth muscle contraction Smooth muscle relaxation ...
Skeletal Muscle Tissue
Skeletal Muscle Tissue

... Muscles are made up of tiny elastic fibres that have the ability to: Shorten or contract. Spring back to the original form after contraction - like elastic. Stretch when relaxed. Respond to stimuli provided by nerve impulses. Clare Hargreaves-Norris ...
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Myokine

A myokine is one of several hundred cytokines or other small proteins (~5–20 kDa) and proteoglycan peptides that are produced and released by muscle cells (myocytes) in response to muscular contractions. They have autocrine, paracrine and/or endocrine effects; their systemic effects occur at picomolar concentrations.Receptors for myokines are found on muscle, fat, liver, pancreas, bone, heart, immune, and brain cells. The location of these receptors explain the fact that myokines have multiple functions. Foremost, they are involved in exercise-associated metabolic changes, as well as in the metabolic changes following training adaptation. They also participate in tissue regeneration and repair, maintenance of healthy bodily functioning, immunomodulation; and cell signaling, expression and differentiation.
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