Access to HE Midwifery — The Study Podcast · Module 13, Lesson 1 · 7:15

The Skeletal and Muscular Systems

With Sophie and Marcus, Biology & Physiology Specialist

Key Takeaways

  • Pregnancy alters both systems — ligaments loosen under relaxin, the centre of gravity shifts, and the muscles of the pelvic floor and uterus are central to birth itself.
  • Support, protection, movement, mineral storage, and blood cell production.
  • In pregnancy, calcium is mobilised from bone to meet fetal demands — which is why adequate dietary calcium matters throughout.
  • The shape and dimensions of the bony pelvis determine whether vaginal birth is mechanically possible.
  • Midwives learn pelvic assessment because a contracted pelvis can necessitate caesarean section.

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Full Transcript

Sophie: Today we're covering the skeletal and muscular systems. I'm Sophie, alongside Marcus, our Biology and Physiology Specialist. Marcus, how do these systems intersect with pregnancy?

Marcus: Profoundly. Pregnancy alters both systems — ligaments loosen under relaxin, the centre of gravity shifts, and the muscles of the pelvic floor and uterus are central to birth itself.

Sophie: Let's start with the skeleton. What are its core functions?

Marcus: Support, protection, movement, mineral storage, and blood cell production. In pregnancy, calcium is mobilised from bone to meet fetal demands — which is why adequate dietary calcium matters throughout.

Sophie: And the pelvis specifically is critical in obstetrics.

Why is the skeletal and muscular systems important in midwifery practice?

Marcus: The shape and dimensions of the bony pelvis determine whether vaginal birth is mechanically possible. Midwives learn pelvic assessment because a contracted pelvis can necessitate caesarean section.

Sophie: What about the three types of muscle tissue?

Marcus: Skeletal muscle is voluntary and attaches to bone — important for posture and pushing in second stage. Smooth muscle is involuntary — it lines the uterus, blood vessels, and gut. Cardiac muscle is found only in the heart.

Sophie: The uterus being smooth muscle is significant for labour, isn't it?

Marcus: Very. Smooth muscle contracts involuntarily in response to oxytocin. Syntocinon — synthetic oxytocin — augments these contractions. Tocolytic drugs like nifedipine inhibit them to halt preterm labour.

How does the skeletal and muscular systems work in a healthcare context?

Sophie: How does relaxin affect the musculoskeletal system?

Marcus: Relaxin softens ligaments — especially the pubic symphysis and sacroiliac joints — to allow pelvic widening for birth. This can cause pelvic girdle pain, which affects around one in five pregnant women.

Sophie: And pelvic floor muscles — these come up constantly in postnatal care.

Marcus: They're the scaffold supporting the pelvic organs. Childbirth can stretch or damage them, leading to incontinence or prolapse. Pelvic floor exercises are evidence-based prevention.

Sophie: So understanding musculoskeletal anatomy directly shapes how midwives advise and support women postnatally.

What should learners understand about the skeletal and muscular systems?

Marcus: Completely. From birth positioning to postnatal recovery and physiotherapy referral — this anatomy is clinically applied every day.

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