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The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

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Page 1: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

The Muscular System&

The Skeletal System&

SkinCRCT Coach Book:

Pages 72-75

Page 2: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

• For humans and most other animals, movement is important for survival.

• Being able to move makes it possible to escape danger, get food, and to find a mate.

• Movement is made possible by the skeletal and muscular systems.

Page 3: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

The Skeletal System:

Purpose:

• supports the body and allows movement.

• It also protects internal organs, stores some materials, and makes blood cells

Page 4: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

2 Parts:

1. Axial: Skull & vertebral column

2. Appendicular: appendages

(arms, legs, hips & shoulders)

Page 5: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Major Organs:• 206 bones (in humans)

• cartilage

Page 6: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Bones• Did you know??Bones are living tissues that make up the

skeleton.

• Bones support the body.

• They are made up of bone cells surrounded by deposits of calcium and other minerals.

• A typical bone is surrounded by a tough layer of connective tissue.

• As blood passes through this layer, it supplies oxygen and nutrients to the bone

Page 7: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Blood Marrow• Inside bones are cavities that contain a soft

tissue called bone marrow.

• Yellow marrow is made up mostly of fat cells.

• Red marrow produces red blood cells, some kinds of white blood cells, and platelets.

Page 8: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Cartilage• The skeleton of a developing fetus begins as

cartilage. • Cartilage is a flexible connective tissue.• As the body develops, most of the cartilage in the

body is replaced by bone. • Some parts of the body where cartilage is not

replaced by bone include the lower part of the nose and the connective tissue that forms your ears.

Page 9: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Cartilage continued…• Cartilage also remains at joints, the places where

two bones meet. • This cartilage helps cushion the joints. • Many long bones, such as those in the arms and

legs, have growth plates at their ends. At these plates, cartilage grows, making the bones longer.

• After a while, the new cartilage is replaced by bone. By early adulthood, the cartilage in the growth plates is replaced by bone. When this happens, the person stops growing.

Page 10: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Joints• A joint is a place where one bone attaches to

another.

• Tough fibers called ligaments connect bones to each other at joints.

Page 11: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Types of Joints• There are three main types of joints:

1. Immovable or fixed joint2. Slightly movable joint3. Freely moveable joints

• Each type of joint is described by the type of movement it allows.

Page 12: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Immovable Joints• An immovable joint, or fixed joint, does not

allow movement.

• At this type of joint, the bones are locked together by connective tissue or fused together.

• The bones in the skull meet at immovable joints.

Page 13: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Slightly Movable Joints• Slightly movable joints allow restricted

movement.

• The joints between adjacent vertebrae that protect the spinal cord are examples of slightly movable joints.

Page 14: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Freely Movable Joints• Freely movable joints

allow movement in one or more directions.

• The four common types of freely movable joints are:

1. Ball and Socket Joint

2. Hinge Joint3. Pivot Joint4. Saddle Joint

Page 15: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

The Muscular SystemPurpose:

• The muscular system consists of the body’s muscles.

• One job of the muscular system is to work with the skeletal system to move the body.

• It also helps to: keep the body warm give the body shapeprovide the force

needed to move blood throughout the body.

Page 16: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

• There are about 600 muscles in the human body!!

• Two Main types:– Involuntary: you can not control them– Voluntary: you can control them

Page 17: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Types of Muscle• There are three basic types of muscle tissue in

the human body:

1. skeletal muscle2. smooth muscle3. cardiac muscle

• Each type of muscle tissue plays a different role.

Page 18: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Skeletal Muscle

• Muscle tissue that connects to the bones.

• Most skeletal muscles are consciously controlled by the central nervous system.

• These muscles are used for such movements as kicking a ball, lifting a fork, or turning the pages of a book.

• Skeletal muscles look striped because they have bands called striations. For this reason, skeletal muscle is also called striated muscle.

Page 19: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Smooth Muscle • A type of muscle that is usually not under your

conscious, voluntary control.

• The stomach and the walls of veins are made up mostly of smooth muscle tissue.

• Smooth muscles do such things as moving food through the digestive tract.

• Smooth muscle cells are not striated.

Page 20: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Cardiac Muscle• Cardiac muscle tissue makes up the

heart. – only in the heart. – Recall that the heart is a muscular organ

that pumps blood through the circulatory system.

• Cardiac muscle is striated, like skeletal muscle.

• However, cardiac muscle is not under your conscious or voluntary control. In this way, cardiac muscle is more like smooth muscle.

Page 21: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Bones and Muscles: Working Together

• Skeletal muscles are attached to the bones of the skeleton by strips of connective tissue called tendons.

• The muscles are attached to bones in opposing pairs.– When one muscle contracts, or

tightens, it pulls the bone in one direction.

– The other muscle in the pair relaxes. – To return the bone it its original position,

the second muscle contracts, pulling the bone in the opposite direction, as the first muscle relaxes.

Page 22: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

SKIN

• Skin is the largest organ in the human body.

• Spread out, it covers 1.5 meters squared!

• Functions:1. Protection2. Maintain temperature3. Eliminate wastes4. Gather information5. Produce vitamin D

Page 23: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

2 Layers:

• Epidermis

• Dermis

• Under the skin is a layer of fat

Page 24: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Epidermis• Top layer• Mostly dead skin

cells• Protects the under

layers• Thinner than the

dermis• No nerves or blood

vessels Does contain melanin-pigment that gives skin it’s color

Page 25: The Muscular System & The Skeletal System & Skin CRCT Coach Book: Pages 72-75

Dermis• Thicker, underneath

layer

• Contains:– Blood vessels– Nerves– Sweat glands– Oil glands– Hair follicles