Muscular System Key terms
Muscular System Key terms
Muscular System Key terms
Muscular System Key terms
Muscular System Key terms
100

What is Abduction

Moving a body part away from the midline.

100

What is Adduction

Moving a body part toward the midline.

100

What are Cardiac Muscle:

 Forms the walls of the heart; it is involuntary and contracts to circulate blood.

100

What is Circumduction

Moving in a circle at a joint (e.g., swinging an arm).

100

what is Contractibility

The ability of muscle fibers to shorten and thicken, causing movement.

200

what is Contracture

A severe tightening of a flexor muscle, resulting in the bending of a joint (e.g., foot drop).

200

what is Dorsiflexion

Bending the foot toward the knee.

200

What is Elasticity

The ability to return to the original shape after contracting or stretching.

200

What is Excitability (Irritability)

 The ability to respond to a stimulus, such as a nerve impulse.

200

What is Extensibility

The ability to be stretched.

300

What is Extension

Straightening a body part.

300

What is Fascia

A tough, sheetlike membrane that covers and protects the tissue (e.g., the lumbodorsal fascia).

300

What is Flexion

 Bending a body part.

300

What is Insertion

The end of a muscle attachment that moves when the muscle contracts.

300

What is Involuntary

Muscle control that is not under conscious control (applies to cardiac and visceral/smooth muscle).

400

What is Muscle Tone

A state of partial contraction at all times, even when not in use.

400

What is the Muscular System

The system is made up of more than 600 muscles.

400

What is the Origin

The end of a muscle attachment that does not move when the muscle contracts.

400

What is Plantar Flexion

Bending the foot away from the knee.

400

What is Pronation

 the natural inward rolling of the foot that occurs during activities like walking or running, acting as a shock absorber

500

What is Rotation

Turning a body part around its own axis.

500

Skeletal Muscle

Attached to bones; it is voluntary and has a striped (striated) appearance.

500

What are Tendons

 Strong, tough, fibrous connective-tissue cords (e.g., the Achilles tendon).

500

What are Visceral (Smooth) Muscle

Located in internal organs (e.g., digestive, respiratory systems, blood vessels); it is involuntary and contracts slowly and steadily to cause movement in organs.

500

What is Voluntary

Muscle control that is under conscious control (applies to skeletal muscle).

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