Fibrous connective tissues are found in cartilage, ligaments, and tendons.
Cartilage prevents adjacent bone ends from grinding together during movement, tendons attach skeletal muscles to the bones and hold the bones in close proximity, and ligaments are similar to tendons but have the elasticity necessary for directional flexibility and the full range of joint motion.
Most skeletal muscles function in pairs, with one relaxing and the other contracting while causing movement of the bones in an appendage. An example is the biceps and the triceps involvement with movement between the humerus in the upper arm and the ulna and radius in the forearm.
The major tissues involved in the skeletal system include connective tissues and muscle. The connective tissues help hold the skeletal system together.
The motor neurons are responsible in skeletal muscle movement.
Musculo-skeletal Tissue
Skeletal (support) Muscular (motion)
The biceps include both skeletal muscle tissue and connective tissue. The skeletal muscle tissue is responsible for the movement of the biceps, while the connective tissue helps to support and stabilize the muscle fibers.
three reasons why the connective tissue wrappings of skeletal muscle are important
muscle, connective, or skeletal
CONNECTIVE and MUSCULAR
Fibroblasts.
skeletal
skeletal system
there are three Major systems that control basic body movement, the muscular system and skeletal system; both controlled by the nervous system.