Muscle cells form all three types of muscle tissue.
Muscles form little groups similar to thick string.
A myocyte, which is also known as a muscle cell, is a long, tubular shaped cell that develops from myoblasts to form the muscle. This process known as myogenesis. Groups of muscle cells form muscle tissue.
Skeletal muscle.
The number of cells depends on how large the muscle is; muscles consist of fiber bundles, which are made up of myofibrils. A sarcomere is one of the segments that the myofibril is divided into. In each fiber bundle there are multinucleate cells, which can extend the length of the skeletal muscle. So, the number of cells in a skeletal muscle depends on the size of the muscle. for example, the number of cells in one of our triceps larger than one of the small muscles in a finger.
Muscle fibres
No, cardiac muscle cells are branched but skeletal muscle cells are linear and do not branch
muscles
No, muscles do not create new cells over time; they merely generate microscopic 'tears' in the muscle after strenuous activity then fill in the 'gaps' which makes the muscles longer instead of having more cells.
Somatic type of nerves stimulate the muscle cells to contract.
Muscle cells.
Skeletal muscle tissue has cylindrical cells. Due to the cells in the skeletal muscle, the muscle can now allow movement to the bones in the body.
Your heart is a muscle. It is also called the myocardium. The muscle cells in the heart muscle are called myocardiocytes.