Compared to extrahepatic tissues as a whole, in the muscle the following pathways are not performed or are not important:
Fatty acid synthesis
Ketone body breakdown
These pathways are crossed out in the figure below.

Figure 7.311 The metabolic pathways that are not performed or important in the muscle, compared to extrahepatic tissues as a whole1
Removing those pathways, the following metabolic pathways make up the muscle metabolic capability:
Glycogen synthesis and breakdown
Glycolysis
Protein synthesis and breakdown
Triglyceride synthesis and breakdown
Fatty acid breakdown
Lactate synthesis

Figure 7.312 Muscle metabolic capability1
Muscle is a major extrahepatic metabolic tissue. It is the only extrahepatic tissue with significant glycogen stores. However, unlike the liver, the muscle cannot secrete glucose after it is taken up (no glucose-6-phosphatase). Thus, you can think of the muscle as being selfish with glucose. It either uses it for itself initially or stores it for its later use.
References & Links
1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:CellRespiration.svg
Candela Citations
- Kansas State University Human Nutrition Flexbook. Authored by: Brian Lindshield. Provided by: Kansas State University. Located at: http://goo.gl/vOAnR. License: CC BY: Attribution