Yes. Skeletal muscle tissue, just like any other living tissue is made up of millions of cells. Each cell contains a nucleus.
Yes, It does. :) Cardiac muscle have a nucleus, same as skeletal muscle and smooth muscle
Yes. Like most cells, muscle cells require ATP which is formed in mitochondria.
in common is one but in some cells 2
cardiac muscles/involuntary muscle
Cardiac muscle.
Skeletal muscle fibers differ from typical cells in that these muscle fibers have many nuclei. The skeletal muscle store calcium ions in the sarcoplasmic reticulum.
cardiac is uni/binucleate, has intercalated discs, and is has branching fibers, skeletal is multinucleate and is long and cylindrically shaped.Skeletal muscle is found in the arms and legs and also other parts of your body. For skeletal muscle to contract it needs to be independly stimulated by a nerve ending. Cardiac muscle is a involantry muscle within the heart which automaticly contracts because of its self- excitable cells. It is a muscle which does NOT produce lactic acide ( normally) and it does not need a nerve to stimulate it to contract
The muscle cells which commonly branch are the cardiac muscle cells. The other muscles do not have any branched cells.
1
which has more nuclei per cell skeletal muscle or cardiac muscle? I guess that they both have the same number of nuclei.
Cardiac muscle is a striated, involuntary muscle. Cardiac muscle cells usually contain 1 or 2 nuclei.
Cardiac muscle fibers
Smooth muscle tissue
The type of muscle tissue that have only one or two nuclei per cell are cardiac muscle cells. Their nuclei are located in the center of a cell.
skeletal smooth muscle neuron
smooth muscles and cardiac muscles contain a single, centrally located nuclei, where as skeletal muscle cells are very large and contain many nuclei.
They only have one or two nuclei
It consists of a maximum of 2 nuclei per fiber so no it can't be considered multinucleated. Only skeletal is multinuke.
cardiac
Smooth cardiac muscle.