The muscle responds and pulls on a bone by way of a tendon. It can not react until the nerve tells it to.
The muscle responds and pulls on a bone by way of a tendon. It can not react until the nerve tells it to.
The internal tendon bulk is thought to contain no nerve fibres, but the epitenon and paratenon contain nerve endings, while Golgi tendon organs are present at the junction between tendon and muscle.
False
The diaphragm's contractions are regulated by the phrenic nerve. A diaphragm are the muscle that inserts on the central tendon.
When a nerve does not signal a muscle, the muscle will not receive the message to contract and therefore will not move or function properly. This can lead to muscle weakness, paralysis, or loss of function in the affected area. It is important for nerve-muscle signaling to be intact for normal movement and function.
I believe it is the Neuron?
Gastrocnemius muscles is the effector. Afferent Nerve- Sciatic Efferent Nerve- Sacral 1 & 2 Nerve roots Receptors- Tendon nociceptors in Tendon of Achilles Integration centers- Interneurons in the spinal cord
Calcium ions
The Femoral nerve. Wikipedia: Striking the patellar tendon with a tendon hammer just below the patella stretches the quadriceps muscles in the thigh. This stimulates stretch sensory receptors (i.e. muscle spindles) to trigger an afferent impulse in a sensory Ia-nerve fiber of the femoral nerve which synapses (without interneurones) at the level of L4 in the spinal cord, completely independent of higher centres.
The point where a nerve fiber connects to a muscle cell is known as the neuromuscular junction. This connection allows the nerve signal, or action potential, to be transmitted from the nerve to the muscle cell, triggering muscle contraction.
The space between a nerve and muscle is called the neuromuscular junction. This is where the nerve endings release chemical messengers called neurotransmitters, which signal the muscle to contract.
Hit tendon nociceptors in tendo-achilles. It goes to the CNS by sciatic nerve, then it goes to interneurons in spinal cords S1-S2. Then it goes to Alfa motor n, tibial nerve from sciatic nerve to lead to the gastrocnemius muscle.