Chapter 10 Muscles of the upper limb
triceps brachii
A. D- large fleshy muscle; the only muscle of posterior compartment of arm A- powerful forearm extesor; antagonist of forearm flexors; elbow extensor
pronator teres and pronator quadratus
B and C two muscles that pronate the hand
biceps brachii
B. D- two-headed fusiform muscle; bellies unite as insertion point is approached A- flexes and supinates forearm; weak flexor of arm at shoulder; flexes the forearm and supinates the hand
brachialis
C. D- strong muscle that is immediately deep to biceps brachii on distal humerus A- a major forearm flexor; no role in supination
extensor digitorum
D- lies medial to extensor carpi radialis brevis A- prime mover of finger extension; extends hand; can abduct fingers; extends wrist and digits
extensor carpi radialis longus
D- parallels brachioradialis on lateral forearm and may bend with it A- extends hand in conjunction with extensor carpi ulnaris and abducts hand in conjunction with flexor carpi radialis; extends and abducts the wrist
pronator teres
D. D- two- headed muscle; seen in superficial view between proximal margins of brachioradialis and flexor carpi radialis A- pronates forearm; weak flexor of elbow
brachioradialis
E. D- superficial muscle of lateral forearm; forms lateral boundary of cubital fossa; extends from distal humerus to distal forearm A- synergist in flexing forearm; acts to best advantage when forearm is partially flexed and semipronated; stabilizes elbow during rapid flexion and extension
supinator
F. D- deep muscle at posterior aspect of elbow; largely concealed by superficial muscles A- assists biceps brachii to forcibily supinate forearm; works alone in slow supination; antagonist of pronator muscles
flexor carpi radialis
G. D- runs diagonally across forearm A- powerful flexor and abductor of hand; weak synergist of elbow flexion; power wrist flexor and abductor
palmaris longus
H. D- small fleshy muscle with a long insertion tendon A-flexion of the hand at the wrist.
flexor carpi ulnaris
I. D- most medial muscle of this group A- powerful flexor and adductor of hand in synergy with extensor carpi ulnaris; stabilizes wrist during finger extension
flexor digitorum superficialis
J. D- two-headed muscle; more deeply placed; overlain by muscles above but visible at distal end of forearm A- flexes wrist and middle phalanges of second to fifth fingers; the important finger flexor for speed and flexion against resistance; flexes wrist and middle phalanges
flexor pollicis longus
K. D- partly covered by flexor digitorum superficialis A- flexes distal phalanx of thumb
pronator quadratus
L. D- deepest muscle of distal forearm; passes downward and laterally; only muscle that arises solely from ulna and inserts solely into radius A- prime mover of forearm pronation; acts with pronator teres; also helps hold ulna and radius together
biceps brachii and supinator
two muscles that places the palm upward