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Slide 1
PowerPoint® Lecture Slide Presentation
by Patty Bostwick-Taylor,
Florence-Darlington Technical College
The Muscular
System
6
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PART C
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Slide 2
Five Golden Rules of Skeletal Muscle Activity
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Table 6.2
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Slide 3
Muscles and Body Movements
 Movement is attained due to a muscle moving an
attached bone
 Muscles are attached to at least two points
 Origin
 Attachment to a moveable bone
 Insertion
 Attachment to an immovable bone
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Slide 4
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Muscles and Body Movements
Figure 6.12
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Slide 5
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Types of Ordinary Body Movements
 Flexion
 Decreases the angle of the joint
 Brings two bones closer together
 Typical of hinge joints like knee and elbow
 Extension
 Opposite of flexion
 Increases angle between two bones
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Slide 6
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Types of Ordinary Body Movements
Figure 6.13a
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Slide 7
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Types of Ordinary Body Movements
Figure 6.13b
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Slide 8
Types of Ordinary Body Movements
PLAY Elbow Flexion/Extension
PLAY Wrist Flexion/Extension
PLAY Elbow Joint and Forearm
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Slide 9
Types of Ordinary Body Movements
 Rotation
 Movement of a bone around its longitudinal
axis
 Common in ball-and-socket joints
 Example is when you move atlas around the
dens of axis (shake your head “no”)
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Slide 10
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Types of Ordinary Body Movements
PLAY Humerus Rotation
Figure 6.13c
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Slide 11
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Types of Ordinary Body Movements
 Abduction
 Movement of a limb away from the midline
 Adduction
 Opposite of abduction
 Movement of a limb toward the midline
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Slide 12
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Types of Ordinary Body Movements
PLAY Humerus Adduction/Abduction
Figure 6.13d
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Slide 13
Types of Ordinary Body Movements
 Circumduction
 Combination of flexion, extension, abduction,
and adduction
 Common in ball-and-socket joints
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Slide 14
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Types of Ordinary Body Movements
PLAY Humerus Circumduction
PLAY Wrist Circumduction
Figure 6.13d
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Slide 15
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Special Movements
 Dorsiflexion
 Lifting the foot so that the superior surface
approaches the shin
 Plantar flexion
 Depressing the foot (pointing the toes)
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Slide 16
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Special Movements
PLAY Ankle Dorsiflexion/Plantar Flexion
Figure 6.13e
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Slide 17
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Special Movements
 Inversion
 Turn sole of foot medially
 Eversion
 Turn sole of foot laterally
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Slide 18
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Special Movements
PLAY Ankle Inversion/Eversion
Figure 6.13f
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Slide 19
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Special Movements
 Supination
 Forearm rotates laterally so palm faces
anteriorly
 Pronation
 Forearm rotates medially so palm faces
posteriorly
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Slide 20
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Special Movements
PLAY Elbow Pronation/Supination
Figure 6.13g
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Slide 21
Special Movements
 Opposition
 Move thumb to touch the tips of other fingers
on the same hand
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Slide 22
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Special Movements
PLAY Hand Opposition
Figure 6.13h
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Slide 23
Types of Muscles
 Prime mover—muscle with the major
responsibility for a certain movement
 Antagonist—muscle that opposes or reverses a
prime mover
 Synergist—muscle that aids a prime mover in a
movement and helps prevent rotation
 Fixator—stabilizes the origin of a prime mover
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Slide 24
Types of Muscles
PLAY Glenohumeral Joint
PLAY Elbow Joint
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Slide 25
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Naming Skeletal Muscles
 By direction of muscle fibers
 Example: Rectus (straight)
 By relative size of the muscle
 Example: Maximus (largest)
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Slide 26
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Naming Skeletal Muscles
 By location of the muscle
 Example: Temporalis (temporal bone)
 By number of origins
 Example: Triceps (three heads)
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Slide 27
Naming Skeletal Muscles
 By location of the muscle’s origin and insertion
 Example: Sterno (on the sternum)
 By shape of the muscle
 Example: Deltoid (triangular)
 By action of the muscle
 Example: Flexor and extensor (flexes or
extends a bone)
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Slide 28
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Arrangement of Fascicles
Figure 6.14
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Slide 29
Head and Neck Muscles
 Facial muscles
 Frontalis—raises eyebrows
 Orbicularis oculi—closes eyes, squints,
blinks, winks
 Orbicularis oris—closes mouth and protrudes
the lips
 Buccinator—flattens the cheek, chews
 Zygomaticus—raises corners of the mouth
 Chewing muscles
 Masseter—closes the jaw and elevates
mandible
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 Temporalis—synergist of the masseter, closes
jaw
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Slide 30
Head and Neck Muscles
 Neck muscles
 Platysma—pulls the corners of the mouth
inferiorly
 Sternocleidomastoid—flexes the neck, rotates
the head
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Slide 31
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Head and Neck Muscles
Figure 6.15
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Slide 32
Muscles of Trunk, Shoulder, Arm
 Anterior muscles
 Pectoralis major—adducts and flexes the
humerus
 Intercostal muscles
 External intercostals—raise rib cage
during inhalation
 Internal intercostals—depress the rib cage
to move air out of the lungs when you
exhale forcibly
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Slide 33
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Anterior Muscles of Trunk, Shoulder, Arm
Figure 6.16a
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Slide 34
Muscles of Trunk, Shoulder, Arm
 Muscles of the abdominal girdle
 Rectus abdominis—flexes vertebral column
and compresses abdominal contents
(defecation, childbirth, forced breathing)
 External and internal obliques—flex vertebral
column; rotate trunk and bend it laterally
 Transversus abdominis—compresses
abdominal contents
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Slide 35
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Anterior Muscles of Trunk, Shoulder, Arm
Figure 6.16b
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Slide 36
Muscles of Trunk, Shoulder, Arm
 Posterior muscles
 Trapezius—elevates, depresses, adducts, and
stabilizes the scapula
 Latissimus dorsi—extends and adducts the
humerus
 Erector spinae—back extension
 Quadratus lumborum—flexes the spine
laterally
 Deltoid—arm abduction
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Slide 37
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Muscles of Posterior Neck, Trunk, Arm
Figure 6.17a
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Slide 38
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Muscles of Posterior Neck, Trunk, Arm
Figure 6.17b
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Slide 39
Muscles of the Upper Limb
 Biceps brachii—supinates forearm, flexes elbow
 Brachialis—elbow flexion
 Brachioradialis—weak muscle
 Triceps brachii—elbow extension (antagonist to
biceps brachii)
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Slide 40
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Anterior Muscles of Trunk, Shoulder, Arm
Figure 6.16a
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Slide 41
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Muscles of Posterior Neck, Trunk, Arm
Figure 6.17a
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Slide 42
Muscles of the Lower Limb
 Gluteus maximus—hip extension
 Gluteus medius—hip abduction, steadies pelvis
when walking
 Iliopsoas—hip flexion, keeps the upper body from
falling backward when standing erect
 Adductor muscles—adduct the thighs
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Slide 43
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Muscles of the Pelvis, Hip, Thigh
Figure 6.19a
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Slide 44
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Muscles of the Pelvis, Hip, Thigh
Figure 6.19c
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Slide 45
Muscles of the Lower Limb
 Muscles causing movement at the knee joint
 Hamstring group—thigh extension and knee
flexion
 Biceps femoris
 Semimembranosus
 Semitendinosus
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Slide 46
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Muscles of the Pelvis, Hip, Thigh
Figure 6.19a
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Slide 47
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Muscles of the Lower Limb
 Muscles causing movement at the knee joint
 Sartorius—flexes the thigh
 Quadriceps group—extends the knee
 Rectus femoris
 Vastus muscles (three)
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Slide 48
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Muscles of the Pelvis, Hip, Thigh
Figure 6.19c
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Slide 49
Muscles of the Lower Limb
 Muscles causing movement at ankle and foot
 Tibialis anterior—dorsiflexion and foot
inversion
 Extensor digitorum longus—toe extension and
dorsiflexion of the foot
 Fibularis muscles—plantar flexion, everts the
foot
 Soleus—plantar flexion
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Slide 50
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Muscles of the Lower Leg
Figure 6.20a
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Slide 51
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Muscles of the Lower Leg
Figure 6.20b
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Slide 52
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Superficial Muscles: Anterior
Figure 6.21
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Slide 53
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Superficial Muscles: Posterior
Figure 6.22
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Slide 54
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Superficial Anterior Muscles of the Body
Table 6.3 (1 of 3)
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Slide 55
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Superficial Anterior Muscles of the Body
Table 6.3 (2 of 3)
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Slide 56
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Superficial Anterior Muscles of the Body
Table 6.3 (3 of 3)
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Slide 57
Superficial Posterior Muscles of the Body
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Table 6.4 (1 of 3)
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Slide 58
Superficial Posterior Muscles of the Body
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Table 6.4 (2 of 3)
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Slide 59
Superficial Posterior Muscles of the Body
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Table 6.4 (3 of 3)
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Slide 60
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Intramuscular Injection Sites
Figure 6.18, 6.19b, d
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