The Human Body

This site is all about human body. From basics to higher levels. It is equally useful to children as well as professionals.

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The hip muscles that move the thigh are anchored to the pelvic bone and cross the hip joint to the femur. Among these are the gluteus maximus (extension), gluteus medius (abduction), and iliopsoas (flexion). The muscles that form the thigh include the quadriceps group anteriorly and the hamstring group posteriorly. For most people, the quadriceps is stronger than the hamstrings, which is why athletes more often have a “pulled hamstring” rather than a “pulled quadriceps.” Movement of the knee joint depends on thigh muscles and lower leg muscles. Movement of the foot depends on lower leg muscles such as the gastrocnemius (dorsiflexion or flexion) and the tibialis anterior (plantar flexion or extension). See table 4 for details.

1 comments:

Thank you. It was interesting to brush up on some knowledge. By the way, I can recommend "Atlas of Human Anatomy," it can be found on http://www.usemeplz.com. Contains detailed illustrations and descriptions of the body structure to them.

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