Anatomy
Excitation Contraction Coupling
Tension
Adaptations
Fatigue, Damage and Principles of Training
100

The invagination of a muscle's cell membrane that serves as a pathway during muscle excitation 

What is the t-tubule?

100

This protein requires energy and maintains the resting membrane potential

What is the sodium potassium pump?

100

This contraction type produces the highest forces

What is eccentric?

100

This adaptation describes increases in muscle cross sectional area

What is hypertrophy?

100

This phase of GAS describes what occurs when a novel, new, or more intense stress than previously applied

What is alarm phase?

200

The area of the muscle cell that serves as a storage cite for calcium 

What is the sarcoplasmic reticulum?

200

This phase of an action potential describes sodium influx

What is depolarization?

200

This principle describes orderly recruitment of the skeletal muscle

What is the [Henneman] Size Principle?

200

Adaptations to this intrafusal fiber results in decreased inhibition 

What is the GTO?

200

Muscle fatigue can occur when there is an accumulation of metabolic byproducts or ______________________. 

What is substrate depletion?
300

The area of the brain responsible for voluntary control of the muscle

What is the (primary) motor cortex?

300

This phase of an action potential describes potassium efflux (out)

What is repolarization?
300

This technique records electrical activity of the muscle

What is electromyography?

300

Muscle tension, damage and _________________ are the primary mechanism of exercise-induced muscle growth

What is metabolic stress?
300

This refers to short-term training, without sufficient recuperation, that exceeds an individual’s recovery capacity

What is overreaching?

400

The name for the motor neuron and the muscle cell it innervates

What is the motor unit?

400

This step in sliding filament theory shortens the sarcomere and creates tension 

What is the Powerstroke?

400

This summation type describes an increase in frequency of action potentials

What is rate coding?

400

The pattern of motor unit recruitment in response to resistance training

What is synchronous?

400

This refers to performance that is enhanced after overreaching

What is supercompensation,or functional overreaching?

500

The efferent nerve that carries an action potential to the muscle

What is the alpha motor neuron?

500
Resetting of the myosin head to its high energy state requires hydrolysis of this molecule

What is ATP?

500

The tension created when a muscle is stretched beyond its resting length

What is passive?

500

This describes the ability of skeletal muscles to change in response to physical training 

What is myoplasticity?

500

This refers to long term decrements in performance and prolonged maladaptation

What is overtraining?