When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Suboccipital muscles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suboccipital_muscles

    The suboccipital muscles are a group of muscles defined by their location to the occiput.Suboccipital muscles are located below the occipital bone.These are four paired muscles on the underside of the occipital bone; the two straight muscles (rectus) and the two oblique muscles (obliquus).

  3. Parks–Bielschowsky three-step test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parks–Bielschowsky_three...

    The physiologic basis of the head tilt test was explained by Alfred Bielschowsky and Hofmann [8] in 1935. [9] However, Nagel described it 30 years prior to Bielschowsky when he noted that the combined action of the superior rectus muscle and the superior oblique muscle of one eye and of the inferior rectus and inferior oblique muscles in the fellow eye causes incycloduction and excycloduction ...

  4. Superior oblique muscle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superior_oblique_muscle

    The superior oblique muscle loops through a pulley-like structure (the trochlea of superior oblique) and inserts into the sclera on the posterotemporal surface of the eyeball. It is the pulley system that gives superior oblique its actions, causing depression of the eyeball despite being inserted on the superior surface. Superior oblique nerve

  5. List of internal rotators of the human body - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_internal_rotators...

    Pectoralis major [1] of thigh/femur at hip [2] Tensor fasciae latae; Gluteus generalis; Anterior fibers of Gluteus meralis; Adductor longus and Adductor brevis; of leg at knee [3] Popliteus; Semimembranosus; Semitendinosus; Sartorius; of eyeball (motion is also called "intorsion" or incyclotorsion) [4] Superior rectus muscle; Superior oblique ...

  6. Extraocular muscles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extraocular_muscles

    The superior oblique muscle originates at the back of the orbit (a little closer to the medial rectus, though medial to it), getting rounder as it [5] courses forward to a rigid, cartilaginous pulley, called the trochlea, on the upper, nasal wall of the orbit. The muscle becomes tendinous about 10mm before it passes through the pulley, turning ...

  7. Obliquus capitis superior muscle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obliquus_capitis_superior...

    The obliquus capitis superior muscle (/ ə ˈ b l aɪ k w ə s ˈ k æ p ɪ t ɪ s /) is a small [citation needed] muscle in the upper back part of the neck. It is one of the suboccipital muscles . It attaches inferiorly at the transverse process of the atlas (first cervical vertebra) ; it attaches superiorly at the external surface of the ...

  8. Orbit (anatomy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orbit_(anatomy)

    The movement of the eye is controlled by six distinct extraocular muscles, a superior, an inferior, a medial and a lateral rectus, as well as a superior and an inferior oblique. The superior ophthalmic vein is a sigmoidal vessel along the superior margin of the orbital canal that drains deoxygenated blood from surrounding musculature.

  9. Suboccipital triangle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suboccipital_triangle

    Rectus capitis posterior major - above and medially; Obliquus capitis superior - above and laterally; Obliquus capitis inferior - below and laterally (Rectus capitis posterior minor is also in this region but does not form part of the triangle) It is covered by a layer of dense fibro-fatty tissue, situated beneath the semispinalis capitis.