yes
No, cardiac muscle is striated but involuntary.
The heart as both involuntary and striated muscles. The striations are similar skeletal muscles. Heart muscles are involuntary like the muscles seen in the digestive tract, called smooth muscle.
The cardiac muscles can be classified as voluntary striated and involuntary non-striated.
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Skeletal muscles.
Smooth muscles. These muscles are not striated and are involuntary.
The three types of muscles are skeletal (striated, voluntary; e.g., biceps brachii), cardiac (striated, involuntary; i.e., myocardium), and smooth muscles (smooth, involuntary; e.g., gut).
The cardiac muscle is the heart muscle. It is an involuntary striated muscle.
Elongated muscles are typically skeletal muscles, which are striated and under voluntary control. These muscles are composed of long, cylindrical fibers that facilitate movement by contracting and relaxing. Smooth muscles, found in organs and vessels, can also be elongated but are non-striated and involuntary. Cardiac muscle, while also elongated, is specialized for the heart and is striated and involuntary.
There are smooth and striated muscles. Smooth muscles are involuntary and striated are voluntary. Cardiac muscles (the one that makes up the human heart) can also be considered its own category.
cardiac muscle is striated cardiac muscle is not voluntary
Generally, voluntary muscles are striated and skeletal muscles, while involuntary muscles are smooth muscles and are visceral (located in organs). Voluntary muscles are muscles that can be consciously contracted, while involuntary muscles are muscles that are contracted at certain times or at all times without the conscious consent of the brain.