Eyes, Jaw, Arms, Legs and your head
Biceps: These muscles in the upper arm are responsible for flexing the elbow and rotating the forearm.
Quadriceps: These muscles located in the front of the thigh help extend the knee and flex the hip.
Deltoids: These shoulder muscles allow for various movements such as raising the arms to the side, front, or back.
Abdominals: These muscles in the core help stabilize the trunk and assist in movements like bending or twisting.
Calves: The calf muscles in the lower leg help with actions such as pointing the toes and raising the heel.
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Bones: Provide support and protection to the body's organs and give structure to the body. Muscles: Tissues that contract and relax to allow movement of body parts. Joints: Where two or more bones meet, allowing for movement and flexibility in the body.
Two kinds of body movement are voluntary and involuntary. Voluntary movements are consciously controlled, such as raising an arm to wave. Involuntary movements occur without conscious control, like the beating of the heart.
Small molecules are stored in various parts of the body depending on their type. For example, glycogen, a small carbohydrate, is stored in the liver and muscles. Lipids are stored as triglycerides in adipose tissue. Small molecules like ions and water are distributed throughout the body in blood and extracellular fluid.
Your body doesn't tense up. If your dead, why would your muscles start contracting? Your muscle cells are dead, so they wouldn't function, unless it gets electrocuted.The above answer is incorrect - your skeletal muscles do, in fact contract after death but the condition is temporary, beginning a few hours after death and continuing for about 3 days, at which time the muscles again relax. This condition is called rigor mortis and is one of three body conditions used in determining the time of death, the other two being algor mortis (the cooling of the body), and livor mortis (the settling of the blood to the lowest point of the body).Rigor mortis occurs due to the very complex physiology of the muscle system and how the muscles are able to move in the first place. This cannot be explained effectively in a paragraph or two, but briefly has to do with the lack of blood flow to the muscles after death, and the absence of signals from the brain.
Muscles get tired due to the buildup of lactic acid, a byproduct of energy production in the absence of sufficient oxygen. This can lead to decreased muscle function and a feeling of fatigue. Additionally, depletion of energy stores such as glycogen and the accumulation of metabolic byproducts can also contribute to muscle fatigue.
Different muscles move different parts of the body.
You have control over the muscles in the body parts where you feel you can move. For example, you have control over your leg muscles because you can move your leg using your muscles in it. You have no control over involuntary muscles like the heart and intestines.
Voluntary muscles help you to perform voluntary movements.
Voluntary or skeletal muscles allow you to move parts of your body in different ways when you want to.
Polymyositis
limb, tongue,eye,lungs,jaw
Muscles vary throughout the body by voluntary and involuntary, voluntary is the muscles you can move and involuntary is the muscles you can't move.
A muscle connects bones in the body. It can also: relax, contract, and provide the force needed to move body parts. There is also voluntary and involuntary muscles.
There are more than 600 voluntary muscles in the body and it accounts for over 40% of a person's body weight.
skeletal muscles are defined as attached to the bones of the skeleton and make body movement possible. they are also known as striated muscles and they are voluntary muscles, meaning you can control any movement.
skeletal muscles are defined as attached to the bones of the skeleton and make body movement possible. they are also known as striated muscles and they are voluntary muscles, meaning you can control any movement.
leg is this correct