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Rat Anatomy - Head, Thoracic, and Abdominal Organs
Rat Anatomy - Head, Thoracic, and Abdominal Organs

Document
Document

... The muscles of the dorsum of the foot: *Extensor digitorum brevis: _has 4 tendons inserted into the medial 4 toes. *The medial slip passes to the proximal phalanx of the big toe and known as (Extensor hallucis brevis) *The lateral 3 slips join the extensor expansions of the ...
Abdominal and peritoneal cavities
Abdominal and peritoneal cavities

... (1) attached only to the caudal part of the foregut (2) formed by the lower part of the septum transversum (mesodermal) (3) as a result of the enormous growth of the liver in the septum transversum the ventral mesentery becomes thin and gives rise to three structures in relation to the diaphragm and ...
The Ansa Cervicalis in Fetuses
The Ansa Cervicalis in Fetuses

... categories. The lateral and medial patterns described the AC as being located either posterior or anterior to the IJV, respectively. Standring & Henry further corroborated this description by reporting an anterior relationship of the AC to the IJV. However, it was also reported by Kikuchi (1970) tha ...
The importance of mesorectal excision in preventing
The importance of mesorectal excision in preventing

... • Most patients with an advanced rectal cancer receive preoperative chemoradiation • Preoperative images not comparable to pathology • Imaging studies unable to distinguish post-treatment fibrosis from residual tumor ...
pdf
pdf

... CLINICAL RELEVANCE -More commonly seen in men in the 2nd or 3rd decades of life, more frequent in athletes. -Soft-tissue mass in the medial aspect of the ankle. -Ankle pain due to a compartimental syndrome because of high intrafascial pressure or decrease of blood supply from posterior tibial artery ...
Non-Muscular-Anatomy-Teaching-Pack-4
Non-Muscular-Anatomy-Teaching-Pack-4

...  From the ischium and acetabulum merging with the capsule posteriorly attaching into the intertrochanteric line of the femur  Spiral ligament  Attaches onto the superior femoral neck and greater trochanter  More posterior Ligament restraints to motion  All 3 ligaments under some tension in stan ...
anatomy_lec18_19_4_2011
anatomy_lec18_19_4_2011

... of this muscle is skin and in the inside it is lined by mucosa) -roof: hard palate and soft palate. ...
PELVIC WALL JOINTS OF THE PELVIS PELVIC FLOOR
PELVIC WALL JOINTS OF THE PELVIS PELVIC FLOOR

... MALE ...
A Practical Guide to the Anatomy and Physiology
A Practical Guide to the Anatomy and Physiology

... journals, minor journals, and publications in foreign languages having limited distribution and abstracting. We make no claim to being either comprehensive or exhaustive, but have selected for discussion papers that we have found useful in solving practical problems of salmonid anatomy. The text by ...
8-Axillary & Median Nerves 2013
8-Axillary & Median Nerves 2013

... ulnar deviation. • Loss of flexion on the interphalangeal joints of the index and middle fingers. • Weak flexion of ring and little fingers. • Thumb is adducted and laterally rotated, with loss of flexion of terminal phalanx and loss of ...
05 Introduction to Splanchnology. General anatomy of the dig
05 Introduction to Splanchnology. General anatomy of the dig

... Foreign bodies are therefore more likely to lodge in this bronchus or one of its branches ...
23-Back of the leg
23-Back of the leg

... • Back of tibia lateral to vertical line • Back of fibula medial to medial crest • Insertion: • All tarsus except talus. • The main insertion into tuberosity of the navicular bone. • It is also inserted into the base of 2nd,3rd& 4th metatarsal bones. • Nerve: Tibial nerve • Action: • Planter flexion ...
AP Animals
AP Animals

...  Sponges were formerly called “Porifera” and are organisms that have the following characteristics:  Suspension feeding (capturing food from the water as it travels through the body  Pores on the outer surface pull in water and send it out through the spongocoel and it’s main opening, the osculum ...
PERITONEUM and TORSION of GUT TUBE
PERITONEUM and TORSION of GUT TUBE

... Genitofemoral nerve (L1-2.): Travels through psoas major. Divides into genital and femoral branches. ...
L13-Wrist & Hand
L13-Wrist & Hand

... • No paresthesia over the thenar eminence? ...
PERITONEUM and TORSION of GUT TUBE
PERITONEUM and TORSION of GUT TUBE

... Genitofemoral nerve (L1-2.): Travels through psoas major. Divides into genital and femoral branches. ...
Upper Limb Relationships
Upper Limb Relationships

... The muscles of the flexor region of the forearm can be divided into three layers: superficial, intermediate, and deep. o The superficial layer contains (from lateral to medial) the Pronator teres, Flexor carpi radialis, Palmaris longus, and Flexor carpi ulnaris muscles all arising from the Common fl ...
adductor canal
adductor canal

... arise from the lumber plexus in the abdomen descend in groove between psoas and iliacus muscles and give branch to iliacs . it enters the thigh posterior to the inguinal ligament and lateral to the femoral sheath. 2cm below the inguinal ligament it ends by dividing into anterior and posterior branch ...
Cliff - USD Biology
Cliff - USD Biology

... D. +/- regulates Anxiety E. +/- regulates Autonomic function F. Important implications for Gender and Reproduction 1. Sex differences ...
Steve`s Anatomy of the Thorax
Steve`s Anatomy of the Thorax

Study Guide Study Guide- Upper Limb
Study Guide Study Guide- Upper Limb

zygomatic bone
zygomatic bone

... • Laterally, separated from the temporal bones by the squamosal suture • Superior and inferior temporal lines • Pix from www.upstate.edu/cdb/grossanat/hnskullant.s html ...
The Elbow
The Elbow

... The most common pathology in the elbow.  Lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow) is an overuse injury involving the extensor muscles that originate on the lateral epicondylar region of the distal humerus (any activity involving extension and/or supination). It is more properly termed a tendinosis tha ...
Glossary - Zoology
Glossary - Zoology

... Epithelial T.: (Gk. epi, on; thele, nipple) Covers body surface, lines body cavities, ducts, vessels, and forms glands; can be squamous (flat), cuboidal (cube-shaped), columnar (column-like), or stratified (in layers). Muscle T.: Enables animals to move by contraction (myosin- and actin filaments sl ...
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Anatomical terms of location



Standard anatomical terms of location deal unambiguously with the anatomy of animals, including humans.While these terms are standardized within specific fields of biology, there are unavoidable, sometimes dramatic, differences between some disciplines. For example, differences in terminology remain a problem that, to some extent, still separates the terminology of human anatomy from that used in the study of various other zoological categories.
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