14:31 Feb 19, 2018 |
French to English translations [PRO] Medical - Medical (general) / Cours de physiologie | |||||||
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Summary of answers provided | ||||
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5 | insertion point of a muscle |
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4 | tibial tuberosity (insertion point of patellar tendon) |
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Summary of reference entries provided | |||
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Origin and Insertion |
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Discussion entries: 4 | |
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lieu d'insertion du muscle insertion point of a muscle Explanation: see ref. -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 27 mins (2018-02-19 14:59:12 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- i.e. the "attachment point" (where the muscle connects to the bone via a tendon) that is "distal" - further away from the centre of the body. -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 29 mins (2018-02-19 15:00:23 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- so it's seen as being attached to "the bone that moves" ... -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 35 mins (2018-02-19 15:07:07 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- in fact here it's: lieu d'insertion du ligament rotulien = insertion point of patellar ligament -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 36 mins (2018-02-19 15:07:51 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- ... of the patellar ligament |
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Lieu d'insertion tibial tuberosity (insertion point of patellar tendon) Explanation: Acute Traumatic Patellar Tendon Rupture at the Tibial Tuberosity ... https://www.hindawi.com/journals/crior/2017/2537028/ Traduire cette page de S Miyamoto - 2017 - Autres articles 17 juil. 2017 - Patellar tendon rupture in children is especially rare. The fact that the area of traumatic rupture has wide variations makes surgical treatment difficult. We present an 11-year-old boy with acute traumatic patellar tendon rupture at the tibial tuberosity attachment without avulsion fracture. Primary end-to-end ... -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 2 heures (2018-02-19 17:02:41 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- Patella Tendonitis (Tendinopathy) - Physio Works https://physioworks.com.au/injuries.../patella-tendonitis-te... Traduire cette page 18 janv. 2018 - Anatomy of the Knee. The patella tendon is located just below the patella (knee cap). It has attachments on the patella and the tibial tuberosity on the tibia (shin bone). The role of the patella tendon is to transfer the force of the quadriceps muscles, much like a rope around a pulley, as your knee straightens. Patellar Tendon - Anatomy | Kenhub https://www.kenhub.com/en/library/anatomy/patellar-tendon Traduire cette page Introduction. Quadriceps femoris is a four-headed muscle that inserts onto the tibial tuberosity. It extends the knee, and one head (rectus femoris) flexes the hip. The patella is a sesamoid bone that lies within the quadriceps tendon. The patellar tendon connects the apex of the patella to the tibial tuberosity, and improves the ... Patella Tendon Rupture - Knee & Sports - Orthobullets https://www.orthobullets.com/knee-and.../patella-tendon-rupt... Traduire cette page Introduction. Disruption of the tendon attaching the patella to the tibial tubercle (the patella is a sesamoid bone making this a tendon, not a ligament); Epidemiology. incidence. < 0.5% of the US population per year. demographic. most commonly in 3rd and 4th decade; male > female. location. quadriceps tendon rupture ... -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 2 heures (2018-02-19 17:16:25 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- If it is the other end of the tendon then it is the the apex of the patella as indicated in my ref. -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 2 heures (2018-02-19 17:17:09 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- and it is tendon not ligament. |
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21 mins |
Reference: Origin and Insertion Reference information: Origin and Insertion Most skeletal muscle is attached to bone on its ends by way of what we call tendons. As the muscles contract, they exert force on the bones, which help to support and move our body along with its appendages. In most cases, one end of the muscle is fixed in its position, while the other end moves during contraction. The origin is the attachment site that doesn't move during contraction, while the insertion is the attachment site that does move when the muscle contracts. The insertion is usually distal, or further away, while the origin is proximal, or closer to the body, relative to the insertion. For example, one could say the wrist is distal to the elbow. Conversely, you can say the elbow is proximal to the wrist. Muscular contraction produces an action, or a movement of the appendage. We will use examples to describe how the origin and insertion affect the action of a skeletal muscle. https://study.com/academy/lesson/muscle-origin-and-insertion... -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 2 hrs (2018-02-19 17:12:27 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- http://www.dralami.edu/anatomie/Genou/Knee.htm http://www.dralami.edu/anatomie/MI-Osteology/MI-Osteo.htm |
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