Body Movement/Types of Body Movement

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across

Body movement occurs when muscles contract ________ joints.

2

Muscles are attached to no fewer than ______ points.

attachment to a movable bone

Regarding muscle movement, what is the insertion?

attachment to an immovable or less movable bone

Regarding muscle movement, what is the origin?

With a few exceptions, all skeletal muscles cross at least one joint Typically, the bulk of a skeletal muscle lies proximal to the joint crossed All skeletal muscles have at least two attachments: origin and insertion Skeletal muscles can only pull; they never push During contraction, a skeletal muscle insertion moves toward the origin

What are the 5 rules of muscle movement?

Abduction

What body movement is represented by the red arrow?

Adduction

What body movement is represented by the red arrow?

Circumduction

What body movement is represented by the red arrow?

Dorisflexion

What body movement is represented by the red arrow?

Eversion

What body movement is represented by the red arrow?

Hyperextention

What body movement is represented by the red arrow?

Inversion

What body movement is represented by the red arrow?

Plantar flexion

What body movement is represented by the red arrow?

Pronation

What body movement is represented by the red arrow?

Supination

What body movement is represented by the red arrow?

Extension

What body movement is represented by this image?

Flexion

What body movement is represented by this image?

Rotation

What body movement is represented by this image?

Opposition

What body movement is shown?

movement of a joint away from the midline; adduction

What is abduction, and what is the opposite of it?

movement of a limb toward the midline; abduction

What is adduction, and what is the opposite of it?

combination of flexion, extension, abduction, and adduction; common in ball-and-socket joints; proximal end of bone is stationary, and distal end moves in a circle

What is circumduction (what combination of movements, what joint is it common in, how do the distal and proximal ends move)?

lifting the foot so that the superior surface approaches the shin (toward the dorsum); plantar flexion

What is dorisflextion, and what is it the opposite of?

turning the sole of the foot laterally (away from body); inversion

What is eversion, and what is the opposite of it?

increase in the angle between two bones, typical of straightening the elbow or knee; flexion

What is extension, and what is the opposite of it?

decrease in the angle of a joint, brings two bones closer together, typical of bending hinge joints; extension

What is flexion, and what is the opposite of it?

extension beyond 180 degrees, moving body past anatomical position

What is hyperextension?

turning sole of foot medially (toward the body); eversion

What is inversion, and what is the opposite of it?

moving the thumb to touch the tips of other fingers on the same hand

What is opposition?

pointing the toes away from head; dorisflexion

What is plantar flexion, and what is the opposite of it?

forearm rotates medially so palm faces posteriorly, radius and ulna cross each other like an X; supination

What is pronation, and what is the opposite of it?

movement of a bone around its longitudinal axis, common in ball-and-socket joints

What is rotation?

forearm rotates laterally so palm faces anteriorly, radius and ulna are parallel; pronation

What is supination, and what is the opposite of it?

shaking your head "no"

What movement is a common example of rotation?

knee and elbow

What two joints are common with flexion and extension?

insertion; origin

When the muscle contracts, the ____ moves toward the ______.


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