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Body Org 	quiz 1.  What is this plane? What halves do you get? Body Org 	quiz 1.  What is this plane? What halves do you get?

Body Org quiz 1. What is this plane? What halves do you get? - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2020-06-30

Body Org quiz 1. What is this plane? What halves do you get? - PPT Presentation

What is this plane What halves do you get What is this plane What halves do you get 1 2 3 Remember for a movement to occur in a plane it must be parallel with that plane What are the 2 opposing ID: 790578

rotation movement body plane movement rotation plane body joint foot midline scapula external halves internal side inferior adduction abduction

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Presentation Transcript

Slide1

Body Org quiz

Slide2

1.

What is this plane? What halves do you get?

What is this plane? What halves do you get?

What is this plane? What halves do you get?

1

2

3

Slide3

Remember: for a movement to occur in a plane, it must be parallel with that plane!

What are the 2 opposing

movment

terms that occur in plane 1?

What are the 2 opposing movement terms that occur in plane 2?What are the 2 opposing moemvnet terms that occur in plane 3?

1

2

3

Slide4

Anterior

Deep

Distal

Inferior

LateralMedial

PosteriorProne

ProximalSuperficialSuperiorSupineThe front side of the body.

Above another structure.Lying on one’s spine facing upward.Below another structure.Further away from the point of reference.Near the middle of the body.Closer to the point of reference.Towards the side.

Lying on one’s stomach facing downward.

On or near the surface.

Through the surface.

The back side of the body.

Slide5

Abduction

Adduction

Circumduction

Depression

Dorsiflexion

ElevationEversion

ExtensionExternal RotationFlexionInternal RotationInversionPlantarflexion

PronationProtractionRetractionSupination

External rotation of the sole of the foot.

Decreasing the angle of a joint.

Combines flexion, extension, abduction, & adduction.

Movement around an axis away from the midline.

Internal rotation of the sole of the foot.

Superior movement of the scapula.

To add back to the midline of the body.

To move away from the midline of the body.

Movement around an axis towards the midline.

Inferior movement of the scapula.

Moving the foot towards the lower leg.

Medial movement of the scapula.

External rotation specific to the

radioulnar

joint.

Lateral movement of the scapula.

Increasing the angle of a joint.

Planting the ball of the foot into the ground.

Internal rotation specific to the

radioulnar

joint.

Slide6

KEY

Frontal/Coronal plane. Anterior & Posterior halves.

Sagittal

plane. Right & Left halves.

Tranverse plane. Superior & Inferior halves.

1

2

3

Slide7

KEY

Abduction Vs. Adduction

Flexion Vs. Extension

Internal Vs. External Rotation

1

2

3

Slide8

KEY

(A)

Anterior – the front side of the body.

(K) Deep - Through the surface.(E) Distal - Further away from the point of reference.

(D) Inferior - Below another structure.

(H) Lateral - Towards the side.(F) Medial - Near the middle of the body.(L)

Posterior - The back side of the body.(I) Prone - Lying on one’s stomach facing downward.(G) Proximal - Closer to the point of reference.(J) Superficial - On or near the surface.

(B)

Superior - Above another structure.

(C)

Supine - Lying on one’s spine facing upward.

Slide9

KEY

(H)

Abduction - To move away from the midline of the body.

(G)

Adduction - To add back to the midline of the body.(C) Circumduction

- Combines flexion, extension, abduction, & adduction.(J) Depression - Inferior movement of the scapula.

(K) Dorsiflexion - Moving the foot towards the lower leg.(F) Elevation - Superior movement of the scapula.(A) Eversion - External rotation of the sole of the foot.

(O) Extension - Increasing the angle of a joint.(D) External Rotation - Movement around an axis away from the midline.

(B)

Flexion - Decreasing the angle of a joint.

(I)

Internal Rotation - Movement around an axis towards the midline.

(E)

Inversion - Internal rotation of the sole of the foot.

(P)

Plantarflexion

- Planting the ball of the foot into the ground.

(Q)

Pronation

- Internal rotation specific to the

radioulnar

joint.

(N)

Protraction - Lateral movement of the scapula.

(L)

Retraction - Medial movement of the scapula.

(M)

Supination

- External rotation specific to the

radioulnar

joint.