ATI RN
Muscular System Exam Questions Questions
Question 1 of 5
The depressor anguli oris and the depressor labii inferioris are both muscles that function in:
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The depressor anguli oris pulls the mouth's corners down, and depressor labii inferioris lowers the bottom lip, both creating frowning or pouting expressions. Chewing involves masseter and temporalis. Cheek compression is buccinator's role. Smiling uses zygomaticus. These depressors' downward actions contrast with chewing, compression, or upward smiling, key for sad or sulky faces.
Question 2 of 5
A stretching or tearing of a muscle is a
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: A strain is a muscle stretch or tear from overexertion, like lifting too heavy. Cramps are painful, involuntary contractions. Spasms are sudden contractions, not tears. Sprains affect ligaments. Strain's injury focus distinguishes it, common in sports, unlike contraction-based or ligament issues.
Question 3 of 5
The clavicle bone refers to the
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The clavicle is a slender, S-shaped bone extending horizontally from the sternum to the scapula, forming part of the shoulder girdle. Known as the collar bone, it links the arm to the axial skeleton, providing support and mobility while protecting underlying vessels and nerves. Its superficial position above the chest makes it palpable and prone to fracture. The shoulder blade is the scapula, a flat, triangular bone posteriorly. The jaw bone is the mandible, unrelated to the shoulder. The breast bone, or sternum, is the central chest bone connecting ribs. The clavicle's distinct role in shoulder articulation and its colloquial 'collar bone' name reflecting its necklace-like placement clearly identify it, distinguishing it from other skeletal structures in anatomical context.
Question 4 of 5
What is the basic functional unit of skeletal muscle tissue?
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The sarcomere is the basic functional unit of skeletal muscle tissue, defined as the segment between two Z-lines where actin and myosin filaments overlap to produce contraction via the sliding filament mechanism. This repeating unit shortens during muscle action, driving movement. Muscle fibers, single cells containing many sarcomeres, are structural units, not the smallest functional ones. Myofibrils, bundles of sarcomeres within fibers, organize contraction but aren't the base unit sarcomeres are their components. The sarcoplasmic reticulum stores calcium, enabling contraction, but doesn't contract itself. The sarcomere's role as the contractile core distinguishes it, fundamental to muscle function, unlike larger structural or supportive elements, aligning with its physiological definition.
Question 5 of 5
Which of the following helps an agonist work?
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: A synergist assists an agonist, the prime mover, by enhancing its action or stabilizing joints, like brachioradialis aiding biceps in elbow flexion. A fixator stabilizes the origin bone, indirectly supporting but not directly helping the agonist's motion. An insertion is the muscle's moving attachment, not a helper muscle. An antagonist opposes the agonist (e.g., triceps vs. biceps), hindering, not aiding. Synergists' cooperative role boosts efficiency and precision, distinguishing them from stabilizing, structural, or opposing functions, essential for coordinated movement.