The three types of muscle tissue are skeletal, __________, and _________.
What is smooth and cardiac?
The deltoids are muscles named for their ______.
What is shape?
_____ is needed to break the cross-bridge formed between actin and myosin.
What is ATP?
Type of stretching used when the stretch is held without movement.
What is static?
______ muscle tissue can fully regenerate.
What is smooth?
The bicep is a muscle named for its number of _______.
What is origins?
________ is needed for binding sites on actin to be exposed.
What is calcium?
Type of stretching that uses movement.
What is dynamic?
_____________ is the layer of connective tissue that surrounds individual muscle fibers.
What is endomysium?
The frontalis is a muscle named for its ___________.
What is location?
This type of muscle fiber is used for sprinting and is moderately fatigue resistant.
What is fast oxidative?
Type of stretching that uses bouncing movements to extent muscles beyond normal range of motion.
What is ballistic?
The layer of connective tissue that surrounds a fascicle is called the ________.
What is perimysium?
The internal obliques are muscles named for the direction of its ______.
What are fibers?
_________ and ________ do not require oxygen to occur.
What is glycolysis and anaerobic respiration (or lactic acid fermentation)?
Stretching done by professionals, involves passive and isometric contractions.
What is PNF?
Myofibrils are divided into segments called ____________.
What are sarcomeres?
What is action?
Rigor mortis occurs because following death the body is no longer producing _____.
What is ATP?
Partial muscle contraction that maintains postures and allows muscles to be ready to respond to stimuli is known as ____ _____.
What is muscle tone?