Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
1 ELEC 811: NERVE & MUSCLE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION Dr. E. Morin, Dept of Electrical & Computer Engineering, Queen’s University 2 Nerve cells: categorization • Nerve cells are also called neurons and are categorized by structure and function • Structural categories: multipolar, unipolar and bipolar • Functional categories: motor and sensory Mulitpolar (right), unipolar (middle) and bipolar (left) neurons from:http://people.eku.edu/ritchisong/301notes2.htm 3 Multipolar neuron • Dendrites – communicate information to the cell body • Axon – transmits signals - action potentials - from the cell body to the terminal endings • Terminal endings – transmit signals to other nerve or muscle cells 4 Action potential propagation • Under normal circumstances, action potentials propagate – or transmit information – in one direction in nerve cells. 5 Muscle: categorization • Muscle is categorized by function and structure • Function – voluntary, involuntary • Structure – striated, smooth • Types of muscle: • Smooth, involuntary – smooth muscle • Striated, voluntary – skeletal muscle • Striated, involuntary – cardiac muscle 6 Muscle Types Smooth muscle: no striations or stripes visible in the muscle cells. Each cell has its own nucleus. Image from: www.uoguelph.ca/zoology/devobio/2 10labs/muscle1.html#skeletal Skeletal muscle: cells have striations or stripes; each cell has many nuclei Image from: http://kentsimmons.uwinnipeg.ca /cm1504/15lab42006/lb4pg7.htm Cardiac muscle: cells have striations; each cell has a single nucleus. Image from: http://www.siumed.edu/~dkin g2/ssb/muscle.htm#1a 7 Skeletal muscle structure and function • Primary function of skeletal muscle – generate forces by contracting (shortening) Muscles are connected to bones via tendons. Skeletal muscles act on the bones to produce movement of a limb. Image from: http://biophysics.homestead.c om/muscular.html 8 Skeletal muscle organization • Muscles generate force by contracting to pull the tendon of insertion closer to the tendon of origin • In order to move a limb in opposing directions, muscles are often organized in pairs, called agonist-antagonist pairs. Biceps brachii contracts to flex the elbow joint; triceps brachii contracts to extend the elbow joint. Image from: http://biophysics.homestead.com/ muscular.html 9 Skeletal muscle structure • A muscle is comprised of individual muscle cells or fibres • Each fibre is surrounded by connective tissue endomysium Image from: http://faculty.etsu.edu/forsman/hist ologyofmuscleforweb.htm 10 Skeletal muscle structure • Fibres are organized into bundles called fascicles (or compartments) • Each fascicle is surrounded by connective tissue – perimysium. Image from: http://faculty.etsu.edu/fors man/histologyofmusclefor web.htm 11 Skeletal muscle structure • A number of fascicles are bundled to form a skeletal muscle • The muscle is surrounded by connective tissue – epimysium. Image from: http://faculty.etsu.edu/fors man/histologyofmusclefor web.htm 12 Skeletal muscle structure – gross anatomy There are different shapes of muscles in the human body – e.g., circular, convergent, parallel, pennate and fusiform. Figure shows: a) fusiform, b) unipennate, c)bipennate, d) triangular, e) strap Image from: Muscle, skeletal, Wiley Encyclopedia of Biomedical Engineering. 13 Skeletal muscle structure – gross anatomy Limb muscles are generally pennate or fusiform. tendon tendon Unipennate and bipennate arrangement Fusiform arrangement 14 Skeletal muscle - microscopic structure Image from: A Schematic of Skeletal Muscle, www.uoguelph.ca/zoology/devobio/210labs/sketchmuscle1.html 15 The myofibril and sarcomere Sarcomere bands are labelled: A- anisotropic; I – isotropic; H – Heller (bright). Actin filaments are anchored in the z-disc. Image from: A Schematic of Skeletal Muscle, www.uoguelph.ca/zoolog y/devobio/210labs/sketch muscle1.html 16 Motor control • Skeletal muscles are under control of the central nervous system – brain and spinal cord. Image from: The brain from top to bottom: Body movement and the brain; http://thebrain.mcgill.ca/ Motor cortex is at the rear portion of the frontal lobe • area 6 – premotor cortex • area 4 – primary motor cortex • cerebellum – precisely regulates the sequence and duration of movement • basal ganglia – initiate and regulate motor commands Primary motor cortex – sends signals, via the motor nerves (α-motoneurons), to tell a muscle to contract. 17 Neuromuscular organization • Each α-motoneuron connects with several muscle fibres • The motoneuron and all its associated muscle fibres is called a motor unit Image from: http://www.uofaweb.ualberta.ca/comp neurolab/newshome.cfm 18 Neuromuscular organization • The motor unit is the smallest functional unit in a muscle • A muscle will have 100’s or 1000’s of motor units Motor nerves activate associated muscle fibres. Motor units generate individual force twitches, which are translated to the muscle tendon. 19 Excitation-contraction coupling Process by which excitation from a motor nerve is converted to force generation in the muscle fibre The action potential travels along the cell membrane or sarcolemma of the muscle fibre. Image from: http://faculty.etsu.edu/forsman/histologyofmuscleforweb.htm The T-tubules (yellow) transmit the excitation from the sarcolemma into the interior of the cell. 20 The sarcomere The sarcomere is the basic functional unit in muscle. I-band I-band A-band H-zone z-disc actin filament M-band myosin filament z-disc 21 The sarcomere There are other proteins in the sarcomere. One of these is titin which is probably responsible for the elastic properties of the sarcomere. titin z-disc actin filament M-band Re-drawn from: P. Luther, www.sarcomere.org myosin filament z-disc 22 Contraction of the sarcomere • The myosin filaments have structures called heads • Upon excitation, Ca++ is released into the sarcomere myosin heads link to actin → cross bridges heads change conformation to pull actin towards the M-band sarcomere shortens 23 Muscle fibre contraction Shortening many sarcomeres in series results in contraction of the entire fibril; contraction of many fibrils results in contraction of the muscle fibre Image from: Muscle fibre structure and function, http://muscle.ucsd.edu/m usintro/fibril.shtml 24 Model of muscle force generation Neural Excitation u(t) ActivationexcitationcontractionDynamics Ca++ activation of contractile process Muscle activation Muscle force Muscle Contraction Dynamics FM(t) a(t) Cross-bridge activation • The muscle activation level, a(t) is often estimated from the amplitude of the recorded EMG (electromyogram) • From: Zajac, 1989. 25 The muscle force twitch • In a single motor unit: a motoneuron action potential → motor unit action potential → force twitch. muap t (ms) tension t (ms) Muap duration ~ 5 ms; force twitch duration ~ 100-300 ms There is an electromechanical delay (EMD) between the muap and the start of the force twitch. 26 The muscle force twitch • The force twitch looks like a critically damped 2nd order response, where the muap is an impulse muap t (ms) 𝑡 −𝑡 𝐹 𝑡 = 𝐹0 𝑒 𝑇 tension 𝑇 t (ms) T 27 Summation of force twitches • If a 2nd muap occurs shortly after the first, the force twitches overlap and the resultant force twitch is longer duration and has higher peak force than the individual twitches. muaps t (ms) tension t (ms) T 28 Fusion of force twitches • For a train of closely spaced muap’s, the force twitches will fuse and produce a smooth force profile called a tetanic contraction muap train t (ms) tension t (ms) 29 Motoneuron and muscle cell characteristics • Motoneurons vary in size and shape and electrophysiological characteristics → a.p. conduction velocity • Muscle cells vary in size and shape and contractile characteristics → contraction time and sensitivity to fatigue • Muscle cells within a motor unit will have uniform characteristics • Muscle fatigue is a physiological process – muscle output force (or power) decreases over time during a sustained muscle contraction – can lead to task failure 30 Motor unit types • Three types of muscle fibres have been identified – type I, IIa and IIb. Motor Unit Type Mechanical properties Electrical properties Other Slow twitch Slow, small force Slower nerve or Type I twitch; smaller fibre conduction diameter and MU size velocity (CV) Recruited at low force levels Fast, fatigue Fast force twitch resistant or Type IIa Recruited at intermediate force levels Fast, fatiguing or Type IIb Intermediate nerve CV Fast, large force Faster nerve twitch; large fibre CV diameter and MU size Table from: Merletti and Parker, Electromyography Recruited at high force levels 31 Distribution of fibre types • The different Image from: http://www.lab.anhb.uwa.edu.au/mb140/corepage s/muscle/muscle.htm muscle fibre types – I, IIa and IIb – a are distributed throughout a muscle • Different types can be seen under a microscope, after special staining of the muscle tissue 32 References F. Felici and P. Sbriccoli, Muscle, skeletal, in Wiley Encyclopedia of Biomedical Engineering, Wiley Interscience, Hoboken, NJ, 2006. T. Moritani, D. Stegeman and R. Merletti, Basic physiology and biophysics of EMG signal generation (chapter 1) in R. Merletti and P.A. Parker, (eds.), Electromyography, IEEE Press, Piscataway, NJ, 2004. D.A. Winter, Biomechanics, 3rd ed., Wiley, NJ, 2005. Chapter 8: Muscle mechanics. F. Zajac, Muscle and tendon: Properties, models, scaling and application to biomechanics and motor control. CRC Crit. Rev. Biomed. Eng., 17: 359-411, 1989. The Brain from Top to Bottom: Body movement and the brain, http://thebrain.mcgill.ca/index.php 33 Other Web Resources 1. Southern Illinois University - Muscle tissue http://www.siumed.edu/~dking2/ssb/muscle.htm 2. University of Guelph - Developmental Biology On-line - Muscle tissue http://www.uoguelph.ca/zoology/devobio/210labs/muscle1.html#skeletal 3. Eastern Kentucky University – Neurons & the Nervous System http://people.eku.edu/ritchisong/301notes2.htm 4. Dr. J.A. Illingworth, Muscle Structure and Function http://www.bmb.leeds.ac.uk/illingworth/muscle/ 5. Structure and Function of Skeletal Muscle http://courses.washington.edu/conj/bess/muscle/structurefunc2.html 6. Histology of muscle http://faculty.etsu.edu/forsman/histologyofmuscleforweb.htm 7. Blue Histology – Muscle (School of Anatomy and Human Biology, University of Western Australia http://www.lab.anhb.uwa.edu.au/mb140/corepages/muscle/muscle.htm