Anatomical Movements
4 kinds of sagittal movements:
1. Flexion and Extension (at many joints) 2. Plantar flexion and Dorsiflexion (at ankle joint only) 3. Elevation and depression (temporomandibular joint only) 4. Scapular tilt and return from tilt (scapula only)
4 kinds of coronal plane movements
1. abduction and adduction (many joints) 2. right lateral bending and left lateral bending (head, neck and trunk only) 3. inversion and eversion (joints within foot only) 4. elevation and depression (scapula only)
Abduction and adduction
Abduction involves moving a body part sideways awar from the midline, ie. doing jumping jacks Adduction is simply the reverse - moving the body part back towards the midline. ie. using a thighmaster and moving your thighs back together
Depression and elevation
Can occur at other joints, but the mandibular joint is the only one at which these movements occur in the sagittal plane
5 types of transverse plane movements
Medial rotation - lateral rotation (shoulder and hip) Left rotation - right rotation (neck and trunk) Pronation - supination (radioulnar joints) Protraction - Retraction (temporomandibular joints and shoulder girdle) Horizontal abduction - Horizontal adduction (hip and shoulder joints)
Antagonistic movements
Movements are identified in pairs, and each consists of 2 opposite movements
Anatomical movements in combined planes (2)
Opposition and Reposition
Horizontal abduction and horizontal adduction
This pair of movements has a different starting point than the others. They begin with the arms already in front (flexed to 90 degrees) or held out to the sides (Abducted to 90 degrees) Horizontal abduction is the movement you use as you open your arms wide in preparing to hug someone Horizontal adduction is the movement you use to actually hug the person
2 significant criteria
What direction is the body part moving? In what plane is the movement occurring?
Extension
a straightening type of movement - usually results in an increase of the joint angle - usually a backward movement. ie. with elbow bent and hand at shoulder, movement back down to anatomical position
Flexion
a type of bending movement which usually results in a decrease of the joint angle - usually a forward movement ie. from anatomical position, bending at elbow so hand comes upwards towards shoulder (examples in my own words)
Protraction and retraction
are movements of only the mandible and the shoulder girdle PROTRACTION involves forward movement of the body part, ie protruding your mandible forward to create an underbite or rounding your shoulders. RETRACTION is the reverse - pulling the mandible back (overbite) or pulling the shoulders back (throw out your chest)
Sagittal plane movements - direction
are usually forward and backwards types of movements - ie. swinging your arms straight forward or backward
Dorsiflexion
involves lifting up your foot so your toes are off the floor and your weight is back on your heels
Lateral bending
involves the body part leaning sideways either to the left or right The only joints that can undergo lateral bending are the intervertebral joints (trunk, head plus neck)
Scapular tilt
is a movement that generally does not occur in isolation -occurs with extension of the shoulder joint behind the body- ie. in the backswing of bowling During scapular tilt, the subscapular fossa moves from facing forward to facing obliquely downward such that the inferior angle lifts off the ribcage and can be seen "sticking out" posteriorly
Plantar flexion
is the reverse movement of dorsiflexion and continues in the opposite direction to standing on your toes.
Lateral bending is also called
lateral flexion or side bending
Depression
lowering of the mandible
Inversion and eversion
movements of the foot that occur at the intertarsal joints - many joints within the foot. INVERSION occurs when you lift the inside of the foot upward so that the soles of your foot face inwards. EVERSION is the reverse - lifting the lateral edges of the foot so the soles face outward
Pronation and supination
movements that are specific to the forearm (at the radioulnar joints) SUPINATION is the movement of turning the palm face forward or face up PRONATION is the movement of turning the palm face backward or downward * these movements allow us to position the hand and the digits for grasping and manipulating objects
Medial and lateral rotation
occur only at the hip and shoulder joints Rotational movements at the hip or shoulder involve the femur or humerus turning around its long axis (like spinning a pencil) MEDIAL rotation occurs when the anterior of the bone turns to face medially LATERAL rotation is the reverse, when the anterior turns to face laterally
RIght or left rotation
only at the neck and trunk, involves twisting type of movements. ie. shoulder check when driving, or trunk rotations
elevation
raising of the mandible
Transverse plane movement involves
some type of twisting or turning movement
Scapular elevation and depression
the movement of shrugging your shoulders - involves the scapula and clavicle moving upwards Scapular depression is the reverse (also used when pushing against the armrests of a chair when trying to stand up)
Opposition and reposition
this pair of movements is particular to the thumb - occurring at the joint between the trapezium and the base of the 1st metacarpal OPPOSITION involves a combo of several movements: flexion, abduction, adduction, and a little rotation. The result is that the palmar surface of the thumb turns to face the palm of the hand and palmar surfaces of the fingers. REPOSITION is the return from opposition
Direction of coronal plane movements
usually sideways either away from or toward the middle of the body or body part.