We tend to associate lack of calcium with skeletal problems like bone density loss and osteoporosis. In this?

We tend to associate lack of calcium with skeletal problems like bone density loss and osteoporosis. In this portion of the reading we see why the body scavenges the bone for calcium if the diet is deficient. Why is calcium critical to muscle contraction? If it were the other way around, that is, the body scavenged calcium from muscle to maintain healthy bone, would survival be affected?

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Answers:
The following steps are involved in muscle contraction:

(1) The sequence of events leading to contraction is initiated somewhere in the central nervous system, either as voluntary activity from the brain or as reflex activity from the spinal cord.
(2) A motor neuron in the ventral horn of the spinal cord is activated, and an action potential passes outward in a ventral root of the spinal cord.
(3) The axon branches to supply a number of muscle fibers called a motor unit, and the action potential is conveyed to a motor end plate on each muscle fiber.
(4) At the motor end plate, the action potential causes the release of packets or quanta of acetylcholine into the synaptic clefts on the surface of the muscle fiber.
(5) Acetylcholine causes the electrical resting potential under the motor end plate to change, and this then initiates an action potential which passes in both directions along the surface of the muscle fiber.
(6) At the opening of each transverse tubule onto the muscle fiber surface, the action potential spreads inside the muscle fiber.
(7) At each point where a transverse tubule touches part of the sarcoplasmic reticulum, it causes the sarcoplasmic reticulum to release Ca++ ions (calcium).
(8) The calcium ions result in movement of troponin and tropomyosin on their thin filaments, and this enables the myosin molecule heads to "grab and swivel" their way along the thin filament. This is the driving force of muscle contraction.

Contraction is turned off by the following sequence of events:

(9) Acetylcholine at the neuromuscular junction is broken down by acetylcholinesterase, and this terminates the stream of action potentials along the muscle fiber surface.
(10) The sarcoplasmic reticulum ceases to release calcium ions, and immediately starts to resequester all the calcium ions that have been released.
(11) In the absence of calcium ions, a change in the configuration of troponin and tropomyosin then blocks the action of the myosin molecule heads, and contraction ceases.
(12) In the living animal, an external stretching force, such as gravity or an antagonistic muscle, pulls the muscle back to its original length.

Most definitely, survival would be affected if the muscles of our bodies had to scavenge the rest of the body for that vital componet that any and all muscles need to contract, i.e., calcium. That's the beautiful thing about how our bodies are made to perform. We could survive--though not very well--with a weakened skeletal frame but not without the use of our legs, arms, hands, a pumping heart, etc.


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