No. Voluntary control is present in things such as moving your hands, feet or other extremities. If you see a can of coke and want to pick it up, your body tells your arm to move over and pick it up. However, cardiac tissue is not a consciously controlled object. It is necessary for you to live, and operates on its own through brain signals that you don't consciously or voluntarily control. You cannot decide that you want your cardiac tissue to stop working one second and begin again another second. So, no.
Muscle tissue. Cardiac: the muscles in or related to the heart Skeletal: muscles that you can voluntarily control, such as your biceps Smooth: muscles in or around your organs, which cannot be voluntarily controlled (ie. the muscles in your stomach or intestines)
Generally, skeletal muscle is voluntarily controlled and smooth muscle is not. Some structures have a combination of both. For example, the bladder is made up of smooth muscle and consists of some skeletal muscle at the sphincter which is capable of "holding" it until you are ready.
Skeletal muscles are under voluntary control; smooth muscles and cardiac muscles aren't.
skeletal muscle
Of the three types of muscle, the two that are involuntary are cardiac muscle and smooth muscle.
Yes, skeletal tissue is the only tissue out of musclular and smooth tissue that is voluntary because you do not have to force the others to move.
Cardiac muscle tissue is involuntarily controlled and has branching striated cells. It is found in the heart and is responsible for pumping blood throughout the body.
Cardiac Muscle tissue =)
Smooth muscles and cardiac muscles are controlled involuntarily - they are not under conscious control. Smooth muscles control functions such as digestion and blood vessel constriction, while cardiac muscles control the beating of the heart.
The heart is made mostly of cardiac muscle.
Cardiac Necrosis is the death of cardiac tissue.
Voluntary muscles are controlled by the skeletal muscle system, while cardiac and smooth muscles are involuntary and regulated by the autonomic nervous system. Skeletal muscles are under conscious control for movement, posture, and facial expressions, while cardiac muscles control the heart's contractions and smooth muscles regulate internal organ functions.