Axioappendicular muscles
The Axioappendicular muscles are the muscles that extend between the axial and (superior or inferior) appendicular skeletons. There are two groups, the anterior axioappendicular muscles and the posterior axioappendicular muscles.
Anterior axioappendicular muscles
The anterior axioappendicular muscles are the:[1][2]
- Pectoralis major
- Pectoralis minor
- Subclavius
- Serratus anterior
Posterior axioappendicular muscles
The posterior axioappendicular muscles are described as two sub-groups:[1][3]
- Superficial Posterior Axioappendicular muscles (or the extrinsic shoulder muscles)
- Trapezius
- Latissimus dorsi
- Deep Posterior Axioappendicular muscles (or the intrinsic shoulder muscles)
gollark: ++remind "7am tomorrow" bring object
gollark: ?tag create "lyricly projects" At least mindbreak & macron & petcruel & clothier + possibly chess world. Will never be finished.
gollark: I could bridge to the forum.
gollark: If your IP was blocked, I would send 403 errors.
gollark: My logs appear to corroborate the suggestion that your browser is wrong. Please make it not wrong.
References
- Drake, Richard L. (Richard Lee), 1950-. Gray's anatomy for students. Vogl, Wayne,, Mitchell, Adam W. M.,, Gray, Henry, 1825-1861. (Third ed.). Philadelphia, PA. ISBN 9780702051319. OCLC 881508489.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- "Shoulder muscles". Kenhub. Retrieved 2019-09-26.
- Moore, Keith L. (2013-02-13). Clinically oriented anatomy. Dalley, Arthur F., II,, Agur, A. M. R. (Seventh ed.). Philadelphia. ISBN 978-1451119459. OCLC 813301028.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.