Learn more about human muscles
The human body contains more than 600 muscles. Skeletal muscle
contains contractile units that have the ability to convert
chemical energy into mechanical energy, thus enabling the muscle
to contract or shorten. Muscles cannot independently lengthen.
They can lengthen only by contracting the opposing muscles. When
one muscle (the agonists) contracts, the opposite muscle (the
antagonist) lengthens.
In order for muscles to contract at all, they must be attached
to the bones. Strong, fibrous tissues located at each end of the
muscle, called tendons, accomplish this. The attachment of the
muscle at the proximal end of the bone (the end closer to the
body) is considered the muscles' origin. The attachment at the
distal end of the bone (the end farther from the body) is
referred to as the muscle's insertion. The origin of the trunk
muscles are always at the upper or superior attachment, while
the insertion is found at the lower or inferior attachment.
Muscles have different contraction capacities and therefore can
play different roles depending on the desired movement. A muscle
can contract concentrically while it shortens or pulls. This
typically results in a movement in which the muscles acts as a
primary mover.
A muscle can also contract concentrically in cooperation with
other muscles. The synergistic effort results in a movement that
the muscle would not have been able to perform completely on its
own. In this situation, the muscle would be considered a
synergist or an assistor. On the other hand, a muscle may also
contract eccentrically while it lengthens, Even though it is
elongating, the muscle can still be contracting enough to help
slow the movement. In this case, the muscle acts like a brake to
control the body as it moves.
Yet another possibility is that a muscle could be contracting
isometrically while it neither shortens nor lengthens. A muscle
may utilize varying degrees of these isometric contractions in
order to stabilize the body and certain joints during an
exercise. The muscle would be working as a stabilizer in this
situation.
A muscle may also contract to prevent an undesired effect of
another contracting muscle. It would then be acting as a
neutralizer. For example, the abdominal muscles neutralize part
of the effects of the hip extensors and erector spinae as we
walk. Neutralization prevents the spine from reaching large
degrees of hyperextension. As you learn the various movements
the human body is capable of performing, the roles and
responsibilities of each muscle during each joint motion will
become clearer. If you are a personal trainer, fitness
instructor, or coach, it is extremely important that you know
this information in order to more competently teach and train
your clients and athletes.