fascicle
(noun)
A group of muscle of fibers surrounded by the perimysium.
Examples of fascicle in the following topics:
-
Arrangement of Fascicles
- Skeletal muscles are grouped into fascicles, which are bunches of muscle fibers surrounded by a perimysium.
- It extends inwards and becomes the perimysium, then into the muscle separating muscle fibers into small bundles termed fascicles.
- Fascicles can be arranged in a variety of anatomical positions within a muscle, producing different movements.
- Within this is a layer termed the epimysium which splits inwards into the muscle as the perimysium dividing muscle fibers into groups termed fascicle.
- Each fascicle is surrounded by another layer of connective tissue termed the endomysium.
-
How Skeletal Muscles Are Named
- The anatomical arrangement of skeletal muscle fascicles can be described as parallel, convergent, pennate, or sphincter.
- Because the fascicles pull on the tendons at an angle, they do not move the tendon as far as their parallel muscle counterparts.
- Fascicles pull on the tendon at an angle, thus not moving as far at the parallel muscles during a contraction.
- If all the fascicles of a pennate muscle are on the same side of the tendon, the pennate muscle is called unipennate.
- If the fascicles lie to either side of the tendon the muscle is called bipennate.
-
Axon Bundles
- Each nerve consisting of many fascicles is covered externally by a dense sheath of connective tissue, the epineurium.
- Underlying this layer of flat cells, the perineurium, forms a complete sleeve around a bundle of axons called fascicles.
-
Blood Flow in Skeletal Muscle
- Blood vessels are closely intertwined with skeletal muscle tissues lying between the fascicles, or bundles of muscle fibers.
- Skeletal muscle: 1] Bone, 2] Perimysium, 3] Blood vessel, 4] Muscle fiber, 5] Fascicle, 6] Endomysium, and 7] Epimysium Tendon.
-
Structure of a Nerve
- The axons are bundled together into groups called fascicles.
- Each fascicle is wrapped in a layer of connective tissue called the perineurium.
-
Muscle Development
- These cells remain adjacent to a muscle fiber, situated between the sarcolemma and the endomysium (the connective tissue investment that divides the muscle fascicles into individual fibers).