Preksha Meditation & Human Health: 5. Muscular System

Published: 01.09.2015

All muscle cells are specialized for contraction. When these cells contract, they shorten and pull a bone to produce movement. Each skeletal muscle is made of thousands of individual muscle cells, which also may be called muscle fibres. Depending on the work a muscle is required to do, variable numbers of muscle fibres contract. When picking up a pencil, for example, only a small portion of the muscle fibres in each finger muscle will contract. If the muscle has more work to do, such as picking up a book, more muscle fibres will contract to accomplish the task. Muscles are anchored firmly to bones by tendons. Most tendons are rope-like, but some are flat; a flat tendon is called an aponeurosis. Tendons are made of fibrous connective tissue, which, you may remember, is very strong and merges with the fascia that covers the muscle and with the periosteum, the fibrous connective tissue membrane that covers bones. A muscle usually has at least two tendons, each attached to a different bone. The more immobile or stationary attachment of the muscle is its origin; the more movable attachment is called the insertion. The muscle itself crosses the joint of the two bones to which it is attached, and when the muscle contracts it pulls on its insertion and moves the bone in a specific direction.

Sources

Title: Preksha Meditation & Human Health
Authors: Professor J.P.N. Mishra, Dr. P.S. Shekhawat
Publisher: Jain Vishva Bharati University, Ladnun
Edition: 2015. 1st.
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