¶ … Muscular System
The normal anatomy and physiology of a muscle determines its capability of formulating a contraction. The contraction of a muscle is dependent on the ability of a neuron to become excited through a process that includes a concentrated flow of sodium (Na+), potassium (K+), and calcium (Ca+) through the neuron and eventually into the muscle cell (Tortora & Derrickson, 2011). A neuron begins its resting membrane potential at -70mv. In order for an action potential to occur, which is the event that will precede the muscle contraction, the membrane must first depolarize and become more positive, reaching -55mv. Once -55mv is reached, the membrane is said to be at the threshold potential, the voltage by which most Na+ channels in the cell membrane would open. After the first Na+ channel opens, the cell becomes even more depolarized and Na+ ions move into the cell (Martini, Nath, & Bartholomew, 2011).
As further depolarization is occurring, more Na+ channels open along the neuron causing the one following it to open, but making the ones behind it that already are open completely unable to perform any activity. Eventually the part of the neuron where the action began reaches a level of 0mv to +30mv, a range where K+ channels can open (Tortora & Derrickson, 2011). The same process occurs concerning the K+ channels as with the Na+ channels, allowing K+ back into the cell, until the cell completely hyperpolarizes, reaching -70mv and ending the action potential, with the mobile Na+ and K+ ions transitioned back to their respective spaces by the sodium-potassium pump (Tortora...
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