smooth muscle
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Noun:
- Involuntary muscle tissue: A type of muscle tissue that is not under conscious control. Its cells are spindle-shaped and lack the striped (striated) appearance seen in skeletal muscle when viewed under a microscope.
- An organ composed of such tissue: A specific muscle, made of this tissue, found in the walls of internal organs and blood vessels.
Examples of Usage
- Noun:
- The walls of the stomach and intestines are lined with smooth muscle.
- Contraction of smooth muscle in blood vessels helps regulate blood pressure.
- Unlike skeletal muscle, you cannot voluntarily contract your smooth muscle.
Advanced Usage
- "Visceral muscle": Another term for smooth muscle, emphasizing its location in the internal organs (viscera).
- Peristalsis, the wave-like motion that moves food through the gut, is driven by visceral muscle.
- "Non-striated muscle": A descriptive term highlighting its microscopic appearance in contrast to striated (skeletal and cardiac) muscle.
- Under the microscope, the non-striated muscle from the bladder wall was clearly visible.
Variants and Related Words
- Involuntary muscle (n): A general synonym for smooth muscle, describing its key characteristic of automatic function.
- Myocyte (n): A general term for a muscle cell. A smooth muscle cell is a type of myocyte.
- Peristalsis (n): The rhythmic, wave-like contractions of smooth muscle in tubular organs, like the esophagus or intestines.
Synonyms
- Involuntary muscle
- Visceral muscle
- Non-striated muscle
Related Phrases and Concepts
- Autonomic nervous system: The part of the nervous system that controls smooth muscle, cardiac muscle, and glands automatically.
- The autonomic nervous system regulates the contraction of smooth muscle in the airways.
- Tone (muscle tone): The continuous and passive partial contraction of smooth muscle, important for maintaining pressure in organs like blood vessels.
- Vascular smooth muscle tone is crucial for controlling blood flow.
Noun
- muscle tissue that does not appear striated under the microscope; has the form of thin layers or sheets
- a muscle that contracts without conscious control and found in walls of internal organs such as stomach and intestine and bladder and blood vessels (excluding the heart)