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Normal ROM of knee flexion is ______degrees.

140-150

Normal ROM for ankle dorsiflexion (knee flexed) is _______degrees.

15-20

Normal ROM for subtalar inversion is ________degrees.

20-30

The quadriceps group include muscles _____, ______ and _______

3, 5, 6

Insertion of Peroneus Tertius is:

Base of the 5th metatarsal (dorsum)

Extensor Hallucis Longus insertion

Distal phalanx of great toe (dorsal

Cervical spine extension is achieved by bilateral activation of which muscles:

Erector spinae Splenius cervicis Splenius capitis Upper trapezius

Muscles that dorsiflex the ankle include

Extensor Digitorum Longus, Peroneus Tertius, Tibialis Anterior, and Extensor Hallucis Longus

Muscles that dorsiflex the ankle include:

Extensor Digitorum Longus, Peroneus Tertius, Tibialis Anterior, and Extensor Hallucis Longus

select all muscles that perform subtalar eversion:

Extensor digitorum longus Peroneus tertius Peroneus longus peroneus brevis

Actions of Sartorius include:

External hip rotation, hip flexion, hip abduction, knee flexion

In the normal foot, subtalar inversion ROM is less than subtalar eversion ROM.

False

The Extensor Digitorum Longus inserts on the middle and distal phalanx of digits 2-5, plantar surface.

False The insertion is dorsal surface of middle and distal phalanxes of digits 2-5

Select all Invertors of the foot:

Flexor Digitorum Longus Flexor Hallucis Longus Tibialis Posterior Tibialis Anterior

Which muscle(s) is(are) acting as agonist for the talocrural joints during the lowering phase of the squat (A to B)?

Gastrocnemius Flexor hallucis longus

Which of these muscles are ankle plantarflexors?

Gastrocnemius Flexor hallucis longus Flexor digitorum longus Posterior tibialis PLUS: per long, per brev, soleus

External hip rotation involves the following muscle(s)

Gluteus medius, gluteus maximus, Sartorius and deep lateral rotators

Select all agonists at the R hip during the lowering phase of this side lunge (left to right image) (right lunge)

Gracilis Adductor brevis Pectineus This is eccentric abduction of the R hip. Agonists for the right hip will be the adductors, of which three are listed here (others are adductor longus and adductor magnus).

Actions of Tensor Fascia Latae:

Hip abduction Hip flexion Internal rotation of the hip Ipsilateral lateral pelvic tilt

Actions of Sartorius include:

Hip abduction, hip flexion, hip external rotation, knee flexion

Select all actions of gracilis.

Hip adduction Knee flexion

Actions of Semitendinosus include:

Hip extension, posterior pelvic tilt, Knee flexion and knee internal rotation

Your hamstrings (semitendinosus, semimembranosus and biceps femoris, long head) are knee flexors and hip extensors. Select the joint position(s) would need to use to stretch this muscle group.

Hip flexion Knee extension

Actions of iliopsoas include:

Hip flexion, lumbar flexion and anterior pelvic tilt

Actions of iliopsoas are:

Hip flexion, lumbar flexion, anterior pelvic tilt

Muscles that flex the lumbar spine include:

Internal and External Obliques, Iliopsoas and Rectus Abdominis

Actions of Tibialis Posterior include:

Inversion of the foot and Ankle plantarflexion

Select all action/s of Internal Obliques:

Ipsilateral lumbar rotation Lumbar flexion Ipsilateral lumbar lateral flexion Posterior tilt of pelvis Contralateral lateral tilt of pelvis

Select all actions of popliteus

Knee flexion Knee internal rotation

Select all action/s of External Obliques:

Lumbar flexion Ipsilateral lumbar lateral flexion Contralateral lumbar rotation Posterior tilt of pelvis Contralateral lateral tilt of pelvis

Tibialis Anterior insertion:

Medial cuneiform, base of 1st metatarsal

Origin of Flexor Digitorum Longus:

Middle 1/3 of posterior tibia

Origin of Extensor Hallucis Longus:

Middle 2/3 of anterior fibula

In addition to acting as evertors of the foot, all the peroneals plantarflex the ankle EXCEPT ________ which acts to dorsiflex the ankle.

Peroneus Tertius

Flexor Digitorum Longus insertion:

Plantar aspect of the distal phalanxes of digits 2-5

Muscle labeled as #5 is ____________

Popliteus

Select all muscles that are knee flexors.

Popliteus Biceps femoris (long & short) Gastrocnemius Semimembranosus Semitendinosus Gracilis Sartorius

Gastrocnemius origin:

Posterior medial and lateral femoral condyles

The Semimembranosus muscle participates in the following actions:

Posterior tilt of pelvis, hip extension, knee flexion, knee internal rotation

Popliteus origin:

Posterior, lateral femoral condyle

Origin of Soleus:

Posterior, proximal fibula and tibia

Origin of Posterior Tibialis:

Posterior, proximal tibia and fibula

RIGHT cervical spine rotators include:

R erector spinae R splenius cervicis R splenius capitis L sternocleidomastoid

LEFT lumbar rotators include:

R external oblique L internal oblique L erector spinae

Muscles inserting on the patella then to the tibial tuberosity via the patellar tendon include:

Rectus Femoris, Vastus Lateralis, Vastus Medialis, Vastus Intermedius

Pes Anserinus is a group of insertions at the anteromedial proximal tibia, circled in this image. Which of the following lists describes the muscles that share this insertion?

Semitendinosus, Sartorius, Gracilis

Internal hip rotation involves the following muscle(s):

Tensor Fascia Latae Gluteus Minimus Gluteus Medius

The Biceps Femoris is the only external rotator of the knee.

True

The Vastus Medialis originates on the linea aspera.

True

The origin of Peroneus Tertius is the distal, anterior fibula.

True

Gluteus maximus is an agonist at the hip during the lowering phase (A->B) of this exercise (squat)

True Action at the hip during lowering is flexion, but the contraction type will be ECCENTRIC. For eccentric contractions, the opposite muscle group (extensors in this case, including gluteus maximus) will be controlling the joint motion.

In the lowering phase of the movement listed here, gastrocnemius and soleus are agonists for the talocrural joint.

True During the lowering, the talocrural joint action is dorsiflexion. Because the mover is going with gravity, and must be controlling this motion, the contraction type will be ECCENTRIC. Agonists for eccentric dorsiflexion are PLANTARFLEXORS, which would include gastrocnemius and soleus.

During the lowering phase of a squat (A to B), most contractions in the lower extremities will be eccentric.

True Gravity will do the work of lowering her body, performer needs to CONTROL how fast and how far down she goes -- so eccentric.

Actions of Flexor Digitorum Longus include inversion of the foot and plantarflexion of the ankle.

True In addition, FDL flexes the MTP, PIP and DIP of digits 2-5.

Select all actions of Sternocleidomastoid:

contralateral rotation (bil) cervical flexion (bil) ipsilateral lateral flexion (uni)

The Rectus Femoris is deep to Vastus Intermedius

false

The six deep external rotators are the only external rotators of the hip.

false Gluteus medius (posterior fibers), gluteus maximus and Sartorius can also externally rotate the hip.

The origin of Biceps Femoris (short head) is ischial tuberosity.

false The long head originates on ischial tuberosity and the short head originates at the lower 1/2 of linea aspera.

Biceps femoris acts as an agonist AT THE KNEE in the lowering phase of this exercise. (squat)

false During the lowering phase, the action at the knee is FLEXION, however since she is lowering during this phase (moving in the direction of gravity, and controlling the motion) the contraction is ECCENTRIC. Therefore, the agonists at the knee will be EXTENSORS (rectus femoris, vastus lateralis, vastus medialis, vastus intermedius).

The origin of Extensor Digitorum Longus is the upper 2/3 anterior tibia

false EDL originates on the upper 2/3 of anterior FIBULA

The Flexor Hallucis Longus originates at the distal 1/3 of the posterior tibia.

false FHL originates at the middle 2/3 of posterior fibula

In addition to great toe flexion, Flexor Hallucis Longus acts to evert the foot and dorsiflex the ankle.

false Flexor hallucis longus inverts the foot and plantarflexes the ankle, in addition to great toe flexion.

Gastrocnemius actions includes ankle plantarflexion and knee extension.

false Gastrocnemius action includes ankle plantarflexion and knee FLEXION.

Flexor Digitorum Longus Flexor Hallucis Longus Tibialis Posterior Tibialis Anterior

false Going up the stairs = moving against gravity, so knee extensors of leading leg would contract concentrically.

The Semitendinosus inserts on the anterolateral proximal tibia

false Insertion is the anteroMEDIAL proximal tibia.

The origin of Tibialis Anterior is the upper 1/3 of the medial tibia.

false Origin of Tibialis Anterior is the upper 2/3 of the lateral tibia.

The origin of Sartorius is on the anterior inferior iliac spine.

false Origin of sartorius is on the anterior superior iliac spine.

The Peroneus Longus inserts on the dorsal surface of the medial cunieform and base of 1st metatarsal.

false Peroneus Longus inserts on the PLANTAR surface of the medial cunieform and base of 1st metatarsal

During the lifting phase of this movement (image B to A), peroneus tertius is an agonist for the ankle joint.

false Peroneus brevis and peroneus longus are plantarflexors that will be working to concentrically plantarflex the talocrural joint during the lift. Peroneus tertius is a dorsiflexor and will be an ANTAGONIST for this movement.

Actions of rectus femoris include knee flexion and hip flexion.

false RF actions include knee EXTENSION and hip flexion, as well as anterior pelvic tilt.

The Rectus Femoris originates on the anterior superior iliac spine.

false Rectus femoris originates on the anterior INFERIOR iliac spine.

The Erector spinae group actions when recruited bilaterally are: lumbar extension and posterior pelvic tilt.

false The Erector spinae group actions when recruited bilaterally are: lumbar extension and ANTERIOR pelvic tilt.

All actions of rectus abdominis:All actions of rectus abdominis:

lumbar flexion, posterior pelvic tilt

Muscles that internally rotate the knee include:

popliteus, semimembranosus, semitendinosus

peroneus brevis and peroneus longus share the following actions (select all):

subtalar eversion ankle plantarflexion

Gluteus maximus is a hip extensor and external rotator.

true

Soleus is an agonist at the talocrural joint during this yoga pose.

true

The Biceps Femoris (long head) originates on the ischial tuberosity.

true

The Biceps Femoris inserts laterally on the head of the fibula and the lateral condyle of the tibia.

true

The Biceps Femoris is the only external rotator of the knee.

true

The Flexor Hallucis Longus inserts on the distal phalanx of the great toe (plantar surface).

true

The Gastrocnemius inserts on the posterior calcaneus via the Achilles tendon.

true

The Peroneus Brevis inserts on the base of the 5th metatarsal

true

The Peroneus Brevis originates at the middle 2/3 lateral fibula.

true

The Vastus Lateralis originates on the intertrochanteric line and the linea aspera.

true

The origin of Semimembranosus is the ischial tuberosity.

true

The Erector spinae group actions include spine extension (when recruited bilaterally), ipsilateral lateral flexion and rotation (when recruited unilaterally).

true Actions also include anterior pelvic tilt

When working concentrically, the LEFT External Oblique muscle acts to LEFT laterally flex and RIGHT rotate the lumbar spine.

true External Oblique actions include: flexion (when working bilaterally), ipsilateral lateral flexion, and contralateral lumbar rotation (when working unilaterally)

Erector spinae will be an agonist through this entire exercise (A->B->A), working isometrically to maintain a neutral lumbar spine.

true No joint motion at the lumbar spine, but we know that muscles are working to stabilize the pelvis and protect the lumbar spine... Extensors will be agonists because if they were NOT working, the spine would fall into flexion.

Tibialis posterior is an agonist at the talocrural joint during this yoga pose.

true This is isometric dorsiflexion at the ankle. If muscles "turn off" at the joint, then more dorsiflexion would occur -- so the opposite muscle group (i.e., the plantarflexors) must be agonist working to maintain this position.

Bilateral adductor magnus muscles are agonists in this yoga pose.

true This is isometric flexion at the hip. In this position, if muscles "turn off" at the joint, then more hip flexion would occur -- so the OPPOSITE muscle group (hip extensors) must be agonist working to maintain this position.

Bilateral tibialis posterior are agonists in this isometric heel raise position

true This is toe extension AND isometric plantarflexion. In this position, if muscles "turn off" at the foot/ankle, then more toe flexion and ankle dorsiflexion would occur -- so the OPPOSITE muscle group (toe flexors and plantarflexors) must be agonist working to maintain this position.

Hip adductors include:

Adductor Magnus, Adductor Longus, Adductor Brevis, Pectineus and Gracilis

Select all actions of Peroneus Tertius

Ankle dorsiflexion Subtalar eversion

Actions of Tibialis Anterior:

Ankle dorsiflexion and Inversion of foot

Actions of Extensor Hallucis Longus include:

Ankle dorsiflexion, great toe extension

Select the THREE terms that best describe the location of the ORIGIN with respect to the INSERTION for the muscle pictured here.

Anterior Superior Medial

Sartorius insertion:

Anteromedial proximal tibia

Vastus Intermedius insertion:

Tibial tuberosity via patellar tendon

Invertors of the foot are which of the following muscles:

Tibialis Anterior, Tibialis Posterior, Flexor Hallucis Longus, Flexor Digitorum Longus

The insertion labeled #1 in this figure corresponds to which muscle?

Tibialis Posterior

Tibialis Posterior insertion

Tibialis Posterior insertion

"Tom, Dick and Harry" is a way to remember the deep posterior muscles whose tendons wrap around the medial malleolus. Which muscles are they?

Tibialis Posterior, Flexor Digitorum Longus, Flexor Hallucis Longus

Actions of extensor digitorum longus include (select all)

Toe extension (digits 2-5) Ankle dorsiflexion and subtalar eversion

Soleus weakness might result in excessive dorsiflexion during the stance phase of gait

True


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