Difference between revisions of "Table of muscles of the human body/Intro"
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Contents |
This article lists the muscles found in the human [[{{{1}}}]].
Muscles of the human body: Overview |
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Head | Neck | Torso | Upper limbs | Lower limbs |
Legend
quadriceps femoris |
rectus femoris |
vastus lateralis |
vastus intermedius |
vastus medialis |
The following tables of muscles have seven columns:
- Muscle, simply the name of the muscle
- Origin, the fixed attachment point of one end of the muscle that does not move during a muscle contraction (usually a bone)
- Insertion, the opposite attachment point, which does move when the muscle contracts (usually a bone)
- Artery, the main vessel that feeds blood to the muscle
- Innervation, the main nerve that supplies motor control to the muscle
- Action, the visible result of the muscle contraction/relaxation (see biomechanics and human kinetics for more)
- Antagonist, a muscle with the equal but opposite action
Often, a muscle is divided into other muscles; for example, the quadriceps femoris muscle is further subdivided into the rectus femoris, vastus lateralis, vastus intermedius and vastus medialis. In these cases, the name of the muscle group is italicized and the component muscles are indented. An example appears to the right.
For more information on many of the terms used within these tables, see anatomical terms of location, anatomical terms of motion, medical terminology, list of human anatomical features and outline of human anatomy.