Cards (79)

  • What is required for a skeletal muscle to contract?
    An electrical impulse sent from the CNS
  • What role do motor neurones play in muscle contraction?
    They transmit signals rapidly to the muscle fibre
  • What is a motor unit?
    A motor neurone linked to a muscle fibre
  • What happens when the motor neurone is activated?
    Positive sodium ions (Na+) diffuse into the axon
  • What does the diffusion of sodium ions trigger?
    An action potential
  • What is an action potential?
    A positive electrical charge that creates an impulse down the axon
  • Where does the action potential travel to?
    Down the axon to the muscle fibre
  • What is located at the end of the axon?
    The synapse
  • What are the axon terminals?
    Structures at the end of the axon
  • What are motor end plates?

    They are located at the end of the axon terminals and meet the muscle fibres
  • What are neuromuscular junctions?
    They are formed when motor end plates meet muscle fibres
  • What is required for a skeletal muscle to contract?
    An electrical impulse sent from the CNS
  • What role do motor neurons play in muscle contraction?
    They transmit signals rapidly to the muscle fibre
  • What is a motor unit?
    A motor neuron linked to a muscle fibre
  • What happens when the motor neuron is activated?
    Sodium ions diffuse into the axon
  • What does the diffusion of sodium ions trigger?
    An action potential
  • What is an action potential?
    A positive electrical charge that creates an impulse down the axon
  • Where does the impulse travel to after the action potential is generated?
    To the muscle fibre
  • What is located at the end of the axon?
    The synapse
  • What are the axon terminals?
    Structures at the end of the axon
  • What are motor end plates?
    They are structures that meet with muscle fibres at the neuromuscular junctions
  • What is the neuromuscular junction?
    The junction where motor end plates meet muscle fibres
  • What is the synaptic cleft?
    A gap at the neuromuscular junction where the nerve impulse travels
  • What neurotransmitter is involved in muscle contraction?
    Acetylcholine
  • What happens if enough acetylcholine is secreted?
    A muscle action potential is created, leading to muscle contraction
  • What is the all-or-none law in muscle contraction?
    If the electrical impulse reaches a certain threshold, the muscle contracts fully
  • What is the point where the axon’s motor end plate meets the muscle fibre called?
    Neuromuscular junction
  • What is the gap between the end plate and the muscle fibre known as?
    Synaptic cleft
  • What happens when an impulse reaches the end plate of a muscle fibre?
    It stimulates the vesicle to release the neurotransmitter acetylcholine (Ach)
  • What is the role of acetylcholine (Ach) in muscle contraction?

    It is secreted across the synaptic cleft to transmit the action potential
  • What occurs if acetylcholine (Ach) is secreted above a threshold?
    The action potential will be transmitted into a muscular contraction
  • What is the all or none law in relation to motor units?
    If a motor unit receives a sufficient stimulus, all muscle fibres will contract at maximum force
  • What happens if the action potential does not reach the threshold in a motor unit?

    None of the fibres will contract
  • What are the key components involved in the neuromuscular junction process?
    • Neuromuscular junction: meeting point of axon and muscle fibre
    • Synaptic cleft: gap between end plate and muscle fibre
    • Acetylcholine (Ach): neurotransmitter released to stimulate contraction
    • Action potential: triggers contraction if Ach exceeds threshold
  • What are the implications of the all or none law for muscle contraction?
    • All muscle fibres in a motor unit contract simultaneously if threshold is reached
    • No contraction occurs if the threshold is not met
    • Ensures coordinated and maximum force generation in muscle units
  • What is required for a skeletal muscle to contract?
    An electrical impulse sent from the CNS
  • What is a motor unit?
    A motor neurone linked to a muscle fibre
  • What ions diffuse into the axon when the motor neurone is activated?
    Positive sodium ions (Na+)
  • What triggers an action potential in the motor neurone?
    The diffusion of sodium ions into the axon
  • What is the action potential?
    The positive electrical charge that creates an impulse down the axon