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Joint`s structure relates to the movement of joint Gliding Movement: Occurs in plane joints between two flat surfaces of bones which slide or glide over each other, eg. Between carpal bones slight movement Angular Movement: When one part of the body bent relative to another part; thereby changing the angle between two parts – Flexion and Extension • Plantar and Dorsiflexion – Abduction and Adduction • Flexion: movement of a body part anterior to the coronal plane • Extension: movement of a body part posterior to the coronal plane – Plantar flexion: standing on the toes – Dorsiflexion: foot lifted toward the shin, such as walking on the heels • Abduction: movement away from the median plane Abduction • Adduction: movement toward the median plane Adduction • Involves rotation of a structure around an axis or movement of the structure in an arc • Rotation: turning of a structure on its long axis – Examples: rotation of the head, humerus, entire body – Medial rotation turns the bone inwards – Lateral rotation turns the bone outwards • Pronation/Supination: • Unique rotation of the forearm – Pronation: palm faces posteriorly – Supination: palm faces anteriorly • Circumduction – The circular or conical movement of a body part – Consists of a combination of flexion, extension, adduction, and abduction – Occurs at freely movable joints – Eg. Windmilling the arms or rotating the hand from the wrist • Unique to only one or two joints • Types – Elevation and Depression – Protraction and Retraction – Excursion – Opposition and Reposition – Inversion and Eversion • Elevation: moves a structure superior • Depression: moves a structure inferior • Examples: shrugging the shoulders, opening and closing the mouth • Protraction: • Movement of a bone anteriorly • Eg. Thrusting the jaw forward, shoulder forward • Retraction: • Moves structure back to anatomic position or even further posteriorly • Lateral: moving mandible to the right or left of midline • Such as in grinding the teeth or chewing the food • Medial: return the mandible to the midline • Opposition: movement of thumb and little finger toward each other • Reposition: return to anatomical position • Inversion: • Inversion is a movement in which the soles are turned medially • Eversion: • Eversion is a turning of the soles to face laterally