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1.13:

Anatomical Movements

JoVE Core
Anatomy and Physiology
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JoVE Core Anatomy and Physiology
Anatomical Movements

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Anatomical movements describe the motion of bones and muscles in reference to the standard anatomical position. These motions often pair with a complementary movement in the opposite direction.   Many movements travel along the frontal, sagittal, or transverse anatomical planes. Frontal plane movements occur toward or away from the body's midline, such as raising the arms to shoulder level laterally and bringing the arms back down to the side of the body. The sagittal plane movements travel between a person's anterior and posterior sides, such as moving the arm forward and backward during walking. The transverse plane movements include rotating and twisting, such as turning the head from side to side.

1.13:

Anatomical Movements

Anatomical movements refer to the various actions or motions that can be performed by the body's joints and muscles. These movements are described using specific terms to provide a standardized way of discussing and understanding the range of motion at different joints.

Here are some common anatomical movements:

Flexion and extension motions are in the sagittal (anterior–posterior) plane of motion. These movements take place at the shoulder, hip, elbow, knee, wrist, metacarpophalangeal, metatarsophalangeal, and interphalangeal joints. Anterior bending of the head or vertebral column is flexion, while any posterior-going movement is the extension. It is the straightening or increasing of the angle between two body parts. For instance, straightening the elbow or extending the leg straight are examples of extension.

Abduction and adduction are motions of the limbs, hand, fingers, or toes in the coronal (medial–lateral) plane of movement. Moving the limb or hand laterally away from the body, or spreading the fingers or toes, is abduction. Adduction brings the limb or hand toward or across the midline of the body or brings the fingers or toes together.

Circumduction is the movement of the limb, hand, or fingers in a circular pattern, using the sequential combination of flexion, adduction, extension, and abduction motions. Adduction/abduction and circumduction take place at the shoulder, hip, wrist, metacarpophalangeal, and metatarsophalangeal joints.  Neck and body rotation along the transverse plane are twisting movements caused by many small rotational movements of adjacent vertebrae. Turning the head side to side or twisting the body is a rotation. Medial and lateral rotation of the upper limb at the shoulder or lower limb at the hip involves turning the anterior surface of the limb toward the midline of the body (medial or internal rotation) or away from the midline (lateral or external rotation).