Directional Terms
Abduction
Latin from ab, meaning of, off away from and ducere, meaning to draw -to move away from the median plane or (regarding digits) the axis of the limb -BODY REGION
Caudal
Latin from cauda, meaning tail -Toward or relatively near the tail -Inferior in humans
Circumduction
Latin from circumducere, meaning to draw around -Movement of a part when outlining the surface of a cone -Seen when an animal (esp horse) paddles of wings when he moves
Cranial
Latin from cranium, meaning head -Toward or relatively near the head -Superior in humans
Distal
Latin from distans, meaning distance -Farther away from any reference point, but usually the main body
Dorsal
Latin from dorsum, meaning back -Near the upper surface of the body, head, or tail. -Posterior in humans -Refers to upper/front part of the limbs distal to the forearm and calf
Lateral
Latin from latus, meaning side -Further from the median plane or midline of the body or structure
Palmar
Latin from palma, meaning palm -Surface of the forepaw (front paws) where pads are located and corresponding surface of carpus/metacarpus -Applies distal to the antebrachium (forearm)
Plantar
Latin from plantare, meaning to plant -Surface of the hindpaw where pads are located and corresponding surface of the tarsus/metatarsus -Applies distal to the crus (calf)
Pronation
Latin from pronus, meaning inclined forward -medial rotation of the paw from the supine position so the pads are on the ground
Proximal
Latin from proximus, meaning next -Near any point of reference, but usually the main body
Rostral
Latin from rostralis, rostrum, meaning beak -Near the nose -Used only on the head
Rotation
Latin from rotare, meaning to turn Movement of a part around the long axis, as in using a screw driver -Direction of rotation is described in terms of movement of the cranial or dorsal surface
Supination
Latin from supinus, meaning lying on the back, face upwards -lateral rotation of the paw so that the pads face medially or dorsally -like when a dog chews on a foreign body in the pad
Ventral
Latin from venter, meaning belly -Near the underside of the body, head, or tial -Anterior in human NEVER used for limbs
Adduction
Latin meaning to draw toward -to move toward the median plane or (regarding digits) the axis of the limb -BODY REGION
Axis
Latin/Greek from axon, meaning axle -central line of the body or limb -Limb: passes between the third and fourth digits of multidigited quadripeds and the middle third digit in humans
Medial
Near the median plane or midline of the body or structure
Plane
a flat surface determined by three points in space
dorsal plane
a plane at right angles to the median and transverse planes which divides the body into dorsal and ventral portions. FRONTAL PLANE in humans
transverse plane
a plane perpendicular to the long axis of the body, head, limb, or organ which divides it into cranial and caudal parts
sagittal plane
any plane parallel to the median plane. This plane divides divides the body into left and right parts. There are INFINITE planes
Extension
movement of a joint in such a way that the flexor angle is decreased -references a joint, NOT a body region
Flexion
movement of a joint in such a way that the flexor angle is increased -references a joint, NOT a body region
median plane (mid sagittal)
plane passing longitudinally through the body or head, dividing it into equal right and left parts. There is only ONE median plane per animal
abaxial
that side of the digit which faces away from the limb's axis
axial
that side of the digit which faces toward the limb's axis