Muscular System

Overview

By opening this webpage, you used at least four muscles (six if you used a smartphone). These were all skeletal muscles, one of the three muscle types found throughout the body that make up the muscular system.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • How does muscle memory work?

    Muscle memory is less about remembering how to ride a bike and more about what's happening in muscle cells. Increasing the cells' size, say by working out, leads to an increase in nuclei, which increases the production of mitochondria. When your fitness regimen falls to the wayside and you decide to re-enter the gym, these gains-based nuclei are already present to quicken muscle cells' adaptation to exercise.

  • Why do you shiver when cold?

    Humans are warm-blooded creatures, so our bodies like to maintain internal temperatures separate from and typically above those in their environment. This is made possible by a process known as thermoregulation. When the brain's hypothalamus senses a drop in the body's core temperature, skeletal muscles may be ordered to shiver, sending out waves of muscle contractions and exothermic biochemical reactions whose byproduct includes heat and energy.

    Photo of person in winter coat walking away from the camera.
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    Why do you shiver when cold?

  • How does food move through the body?

    Food passes through the digestive system via muscle movement known as peristalsis, during which a rippling contraction slowly pushes content through tubular organs, such as the esophagus and intestines. This is similar to what happens when one squeezes a tube of toothpaste, contracting the tube behind the content and forcing the tube in front of the content to expand, allowing the content to move forward.

    Photo of person taking a bite of food at a restuarant.
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    How does food move through the body?

  • Human anatomy 101: the body's systems

    Human life is made possible by the body's ten major systems, which maintain homeostasis by responding to incoming sensory and biochemical input. Each system must work independently and collaboratively for the body to maintain health and respond appropriately to its internal and external environments. The bones of the skeletal system, for example, give the body its shape and protect organs while also facilitating movement with the muscular system.

    Video

    Human Body 101

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