Friday, December 21, 2012

Muscular System

Why is the Muscular System so important? Without the muscular system we would not be able to move. Without muscle humans would be non-existent.

Functions of the Muscular system
Muscular tendons stabilize joints so that the joints won't move out of place. This would make your bones pop out of place if you bent your arm without these tendons. Muscle helps us stand up, and practically fight gravity. If we didn't have the muscle helping us stand up we would fall from gravity. Moving the skeleton is probably the most useful function that muscle has because without muscle moving our bones how would we move. And the last main useful function that a muscle has is heat production because it obviously keeps us warm.

Types of Muscles
Smooth:
This muscle is involuntary which means its automatically controlled without thinking about it. An example of a smooth muscle is the esophagus. It is used to force food down to you stomach. We never think about it, but it always happens.



Cardiac:
Cardiac muscle is also an involuntary type of muscle. The cardiac muscle is the heart muscle that works on its own.



Skeletal:
The skeletal muscles are voluntary. This is because you do think about where your going or what you pick up. The skeletal muscles are what get you from place to another. The skeletal muscles are attached to the skeleton.

Structure of Skeletal Muscle 

Fascia
The Fascia is only found in the skeletal muscle. This is the covering of the muscle and it becomes the tendons. 

Myofibrals
The myofibrals are in all muscle because they muscle fibers. They are involved in muscle contraction.



Bibliography
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q5MyCwatq6E

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Bone Stucture

We did a whole unit of bones and I learned more about the skelatal system more than any other body system this semester. We had a number of different projects and activities to learn more about bone.

There are two different classification of bones. They are the axial skeleton and the appendicular skeleton.

Axial Skeleton
The axial skeleton consists of the skull bones, the neck, the rib cage, and the back vertebrae.

Appendicular Skeleton
The Appendicular Skeleton consists of, the shoulders, the limbs, and the hips

Classification of Bones: By Shape

There are four different types of bones which are long bones that are longer than they are wide such as the humorous, short bones that are cubed shaped bones of the wrist and ankle and bones that form within tendons, flat bones that are thin flattened and a bit curved, and irregular bones that are weird shaped.

Long Bones


Short Bones


Flat Bones


Irregular Bones




What are the functions of bones?
There are many different functions to bones and some of them are very obvious. The bones give support because it forms a frame the supports the body and protects soft organs. The bones also give protection by providing a frame for the brain, spinal cord, and vital organs so the are unlikely to get damaged. Movement is a very important thing for our body and the bones provide levers for muscles so we can move.Mineral storage is a huge thing that bones do because it makes the bones stronger. When you are little your parents always told you to drink alot of milk. This is because milk provides calcium and bones store calcium for strength. Bones also store phosphorus. Blood cell formation also happens in the bone. This is a process called hematopoiesis and it occurs within the marrow cavities of bone.

What are the Structures of Different Bones?

Long Bones
These bones consist of a diaphysis and an epiphysis. In the diaphysis there is a tubular shaft that forms the length and axis of long bones. This part of the bone is composed of compact bone that surrounds the medullary cavity. The medullary cavity is where yellow bone marrow or (fat) is stored. The epiphysis is the expanded ends of the long bones. The exterior of this part of bone is compact bone and then the interior is spongy bone. The joint surface on the tip of each side is covered with articular (hyaline) cartilage. There is a line that separates the epiphysis from the diaphysis call the epiphyseal line.