Contributor: Hannah Brooks. Lesson ID: 12636
Are you aware of everything that's going on in your body right now? If you were, you'd go crazy! There are muscles in your body that work to keep you going without you paying attention! Take a look!
Have you ever felt so tired that you've said, "I can't move a muscle"? Were that true, your heart and eyes and tongue and everything else would stop! Learn about those and the other 600 muscles in your body!
Your body has a complex muscle system that functions to help you grow and move.
There are over 600 muscles in your body, each with a specific job! Some muscles are involuntary, meaning that they operate without instructions from the brain, while others are voluntary, and must be instructed to move.
Before you continue, if you missed or would like to review the first Related Lesson in our Muscular-Skeletal System series on the skeletal system, you can find it in the right-hand sidebar.
The heart is a great example of an involuntary muscle because it contracts without any direct instructions!
No matter what job the muscle has, every muscle is made up of tiny fibers bundled densely together. These cells contract and release as needed by the body.
The job of the muscle depends on the type of muscle. There are three types: smooth, cardiac, and skeletal muscles.
All of these muscles work together to help you breathe, digest food, and enjoy time outdoors. Without involuntary muscles, you would have to control life processes like pumping blood or swallowing food. Voluntary muscles help us walk, lift babies, and swim. Both types are needed in order to grow and develop!
Discuss what you have learned about muscle types with a parent or teacher before moving on to the Got It? section, where you will explore more about muscle groups in the body.