3. TENSION – is the force exerted on an object by a contracting muscle LOAD - the force exerted on the muscle by an object Muscle tension and load are opposing forces.
4. ISOMETRIC - are contractions in which the muscle is developing force but not shortening and no visible movement is seen e.g. weight lifting, sprinting ISOTONIC - a muscle is generating a constant force to move a load e.g. jogging, dancing, aerobics
5.
6. TWO TYPES OF ISOTONIC CONTRACTION CONCENTRIC ISOTONIC - the muscle is shortening while it is contracting e.g. picking up an object ECCENTRIC ISOTONIC - the muscle is lengthening while it is contracting e.g. lowering the object back to place
8. THREE PHASES OF TWITCH CONTRACTION 1. LATENT PERIOD - lasts about 2 msec (milliseconds) and is the time between stimulation of muscle cells and force generation 2. CONTRACTION PERIOD - lasts about 10–100 msec and is the period during which force (measured in grams) is increasing 3. RELAXATION PHASE - the period when force is decreasing; lasts 10–100 msec
17. The shortening velocity is maximal when there is no load Zero when the load is equal to the maximal isometric tension Loads greater than the maximal isometric tension, the fiber will lengthen at a velocity that increases with load