Muscle Anatomy
Muscle Physiology
Actions and Levers
Pathology I
Pathology II
100

This specific term refers to the cell membrane of a muscle fiber.

Sarcolemma

100

The mechanism of body temperature maintenance through muscle-generated heat production.

Thermogenesis

100

The primary muscle responsible for causing a desired specific movement or action.

Agonist

100

An injury involving the overstretching or tearing of muscle fibers or their tendons.

Strain

100

Overuse injury characterized by pain along the medial tibia, often seen in runners.

Shin splints

200

This cordlike structure anchors skeletal muscles to bones.

Tendon

200

The continuous and partial contraction of skeletal muscles that helps maintain posture.

Muscle tone (tonus)

200

This muscle lengthens and yields while the prime mover performs an action.

Antagonist

200

Inflammation of a tendon, typically resulting from overuse or repetitive trauma.

Tendinitis

200

Inflammation of the common extensor tendon sheath at the thumb side of the wrist.

de Quervain tenosynovitis
300

The fluid-filled space where a motor neuron meets a muscle fiber.

Neuromuscular junction

300

The name for muscle fibers that contract rapidly, possess less myoglobin, and fatigue quickly. 

Fast-twitch muscle

300

These muscles contract at the same time as the prime mover to assist and smooth out the movement.

Synergists

300

Chronic, generalized syndrome characterized by widespread musculoskeletal pain, fatigue, and tender points.

Fibromyalgia

300

Patellar tendon inflammation at the tibial tuberosity, very common in growing adolescent athletes.

Osgood-Schlatter disease

400

A single motor neuron and all the specific muscle fibers it innervates.

Motor unit

400

A type of muscle contraction where muscle length remains the same and no joint movement occurs.

Isometric

400

A lever system arranged with the fulcrum positioned between the load and the pull (L-F-P), like a seesaw or the skull balance.

Class I lever

400

A painful condition caused by trigger points that refer pain to other parts of the body.

Myofascial pain syndrome

400

An inflammatory condition causing severe pain in the heel and sole of the foot, especially noticed during the first steps in the morning.

Plantar fasciitis

500

The attachment site of a muscle tendon to the more stationary or less movable bone.

Origin

500

The phenomenon where a muscle's typical origin moves toward its insertion during a contraction.

Functional reversibility

500

A lever system arranged with the pull between the fulcrum and the load (L-P-F), like a shovel or the biceps brachii flexing the elbow.

Class III lever

500

Congenital or acquired spasms of the sternocleidomastoid muscle, commonly referred to as "wryneck."

Torticollis

500

The physical state when a muscle temporarily loses its ability to contract due to a lack of ATP, oxygen, or glucose depletion.

Muscle fatigue