Knes 360 lecture 4 The Hip Joint and Pelvic girdle
hip adduction agonists
-adductor brevis -adductor longus -adductor magnus -gracilis
adductor brevis muscle
adduction of hip assists in flexion of hip
adductor longus
adduction of hip assists in flexion of hip
adductor magnus
adduction of hip external rotation as hip adducts extension of hip
gracilis muscle
adduction of hip weak flexion of knee internal rotation of hip assists with flexion of hip
anterior pelvic rotation (hyperlordosis)
anterior movement of upper pelvis; iliac crest tilts forward in a sagittal plane; anterior tilt
bony landmarks
anterior pelvis- origin for for hip flexors
insertion of tensor fasciae latae
anterolaterally on gerdy's tubercle of tibia
pelvic bone
divided into 3 areas ilium ischium pubis
hip abductor training
dont do abductor machines
pectineus muscle
flexion of hip adduction of hip
ilipsoas muscle
flexion of hip lumbar spine stabilizer in hip flexion (psoas pinch)
biceps femoris
flexion of knee extension of hip external rotation of hip external rotation of flexed knee posterior pelvic rotation
semimembranosus muscle
flexion of knee extension of hip interal rotation of hip internal rotation of flexed knee posterior pelvic rotation
femur
longest bone in body
hip adductors
insert at linea aspera
patella
insertion for all 4 quadriceps muscles
proximal tibia or fibula
insertion for remainder of hip muscles
psoas pinch
make ASIS touch quad
lateral pelvis
origin for hip abductors lateral iliac crest
medial bony landmarks of the pelvic bone
origin for hip adductors -pubis & its inferior ramus
posteroinferior bony landmarks of the pelvic bone
origin for hip extensors -ischial tuberosity
posterior bony landmarks of the pelvic bone
origin for hip extensors -posterior iliac crest and posterior sacrum and coccyx
sartorius muscle
originates frm ASIS -flexion of hip -flexion of knee -abduction of hip -anterior pelvic rotation
rectus femoris
originates from AIIS -flexion of hip -extension of knee -anterior pelvic rotation (quad dominance)
Tensor Fasciae Latae Muscle (TFL)
originates from the anterolateral surface of the iliac crest -abduction of hip -flexion of hip -tendency to rotate hip internally as it flexes (bad) -anterior pelvic rotation
gluteus mediusmuscle
originates on entire iliac crest -abduction of hip -internal rotation & flexion (anterior fibers) -external rotation & extension (posterior fibers)
gluteus maximus muscle
originates posterior side of iliac crest, sacrum, ischium -extension of hip -external rotation of hip -posterior pelvic rotation pull femur back into middle of acetabulum (hip arthritis)
six deep lateral (external) rotator muscles
piriformis, gemellus superior, gemellus inferior, obturator externus, obturator internus, quadratus femoris
ischium
posterior and lower two fifths of pelvic bone
posterior pelvic rotation (hypolordosis)
posterior movement of upper pelvis; iliac crest tilts backward in a sagittal plane; posterior tilt
laterally tibia fibula
primarily on fibula head with some fibers attaching on lateral tibial condyle
stretches
rectus femoris/hamstring stretch (limit other compensatory lumbar spine motions)
posterior hip joint
sacrum is between the 2 pelvic bones & forms the sacroiliac (SI) joints -strong ligaments unite these bones to form rigid, slightly movable joints
anterior (hyperlordosis) and posterior (hyperlordosis) pelvic rotation
sagittal plane
seven two-joint muscles have one action at hip & another at knee
sartorius, finish this one
sacral plexus
sciatic nerve
tibial division
sensation for posterolateral lower leg & plantar aspect of foot
common peroneal (fibular) division
sensation to anterolateral lower leg & dorsum of foot
decreasing the stress on the knee
there is evidence that proper activation of the hip musculature may help control the knee loads during activities of daily living
origin for 3 knee extensors
three vasti muscles of quadriceps-anteriorly
right transverse rotation and left transverse rotation
transverse plane of motion
medially tibia or fibula
upper anteromedial tibial surface just below medial condyle after crossing knee posteromedially
ilium
upper two fifths of pelvic bone
iliotibial tract (IT band)
muscle is the tensor fasciae latae
pubis
anterior and lower one fifth of pelvic bone
hip extension agonists
-GLUTEUS MAXIMUS -biceps femoris (long head) -semitendinosus -semimembranosus
gluteal amnesia
-due to our tendency to sit on our glutes more than use them, they tend to shut down in alot of people and not work the way they should. -glute activation exercises important in prevention of injury/disease and in improving athletic performance
hip joint weight bearing and locomotion
-enhanced significantly by its wide range of motion -majority of lower body power should come from hip, but in most people it does not (leads to injury and degenerative disease)
sacrum
-extension of spinal column with 5 fused vertebrae -extending inferiorly is the coccyx
hip external rotation agonists
-gluteus maximus -gluteus medius -six deep external rotators
hip abduction agonists
-gluteus medius >tensor fasciae latae >gluteus maximus >gluteus minimus
hip internal rotation agonists
-gluteus minimus >gluteus medius >tensor fasciae latae
ball & socket joint
-head of femur connecting with acetabulum of pelvic girdle
hip abduction
-movement of femur laterally to side away from midline
hip adduction
-movement of femur medially toward midline
hip flexion
-movement of femur straight anteriorly toward pelvis
hip extension
-movement of the femur straight posteriorly away from the pelvis; sometimes referred to as hyperextension
semitendonosus muscle of hamstrings
-originate from ischial tuberosity flexion of knee extension of hip internal rotation of hip interanl rotation of flexed knee posterior pelvic rotation
hip flexion agonists
-psoas -iliacus (iliopsoas) -rectus femoris -pectineus >sartorius >tensor fasciae latae
hip joint (acetabular femoral)
-relatively stable due to >bony architecture (easily reproducible) >strong ligaments >large supportive muscles
pelvic girdle
-right & left pelvic bone joined together posteriorly by sacrum and anteriorly by pubis symphysis -pelvic bones are ilium, ischium, and pubis
anterior hip joint
-two pelvic bones join to form symphysis pubis, amphiarthrodial
glute activation
-utilize the fact that glute max has two main actions -hip extension -hip external rotation
Anterior inferior iliac spine
AIIS
anterior superior iliac spine
ASIS
right and left hip hiking
frontal plane
gluteus medius muscle
frontal plane hip stabilizer
what plane should the gluteus medius be trained in
frontal plane hip stabilizer
hip hiking
frontal plane motion of the pelvis combined with hip ab/adduction
proximal thigh greater trochanter lesser trochanter
insertion for short muscles of hip
gluteus minimus
lateral side of iliac crest insertion happens anterior side -abduction of hip -internal rotation as femur abducts -flexion of hip
acetabulofemoral joint
most mobile joints of body (except glenohumeral) -multiaxial arrangement -bony architecture provides stability -relatively few hip joint sublaxations & dislocations
hip external rotation
rotary movement of femur laterally around its longitudinal axis away from midline; lateral rotation
hip internal rotation
rotary movement of femur medially around its longitudinal axis toward to midline; medial rotation