cardiac and smooth muscles are involuntary skeletal muscles are voluntary.
smooths muscles are in you intestine and digestive tract usually cardiac muscles are in your heart skeletal muscles are connected to tendons and ligaments
Smooth Muscle, Cardiac Muscle, and Skeletal Muscle
The three kinds of muscles are the smooth, cardiac and the skeletal. The smooth muscles are controlled by the autonomic nervous system. The cardiac muscles are in the heart and the skeletal help move our bodies.
There are three basic types of muscle: smooth, skeletal, and cardiac. Smooth muscles are part of organs like the intestines, skeletal muscles are connected to bones, and cardiac muscles makes up most of the heart.
Yes, skeletal muscles are voluntary, meaning they can be intentionally controlled. This distinguishes them from the cardiac muscle (heart) and smooth muscles, which are involuntary.
Involuntary muscles (such as the heart, the sphincters, etc.) are traditionally smooth muscle.
Which two types of muscles are involuntary?
Heart
Cardiac, skeletal, smooth Cardiac-heart muscle, helps it pump Skeletal-helps you move along with bones Smooth- lines digestive system, blood vessels, involentary processes
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)
Skeletal muscles are striated which look "striped". The best example of striated muscles is in your thighs. By comparison, your heart is smooth muscle.
There are three different muscles * skeletal muscle(moves bones) * smooth muscle(moves organs and blood vessels) * cardiac muscle(heart)
There are three types of muscles: Skeletal (what we think of when we move our bodies), Cardiac (muscle found only in the heart), and Smooth (muscle in our organs, such as the stomach). Cardiac muscles are striated muscles, they have striations just like skeletal muscles. Striations help move muscles, basically. Hope this helped a little.