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Supinator muscle

Muscle of the forearm in humans


Muscle of the forearm in humans

FieldValue
NameSupinator muscle
Latinmusculus supinator
ImageGray420.png
CaptionPosterior view of the supinator. (Right arm.)
OriginLateral epicondyle of humerus, supinator crest of ulna, radial collateral ligament, annular ligament
InsertionLateral proximal radial shaft
ActionSupinates forearm
AntagonistPronator teres, pronator quadratus
BloodRadial recurrent artery
NerveDeep branch of the radial nerve

In human anatomy, the supinator is a broad muscle in the posterior compartment of the forearm, curved around the upper third of the radius. Its function is to supinate the forearm.

Structure

The supinator consists of two planes of fibers, between which passes the deep branch of the radial nerve. The two planes arise in common—the superficial one originating as tendons and the deeper by muscular fibers—from the supinator crest of the ulna, the lateral epicondyle of the humerus, the radial collateral ligament, and the annular radial ligament.

The superficial fibers (pars superficialis) surround the upper part of the radius, and are inserted into the lateral edge of the radial tuberosity and the oblique line of the radius, as low down as the insertion of the pronator teres. The upper fibers (pars profunda) of the deeper plane form a sling-like fasciculus, which encircles the neck of the radius above the tuberosity and is attached to the back part of its medial surface; the greater part of this portion of the muscle is inserted into the dorsal and lateral surfaces of the body of the radius, midway between the oblique line and the head of the bone.

The proximal aspect of the superficial head is known as the arcade of Frohse or the supinator arch.

Innervation

It is innervated by the deep branch of the radial nerve. The deep branch then becomes the posterior interosseous nerve upon exiting the supinator muscle. Its nerve roots are primarily from C6, with some C5 involvement. There is also possible additional C7 innervation.

The radial nerve divides into deep and sensory superficial branches just proximal to the supinator muscle—an arrangement that can lead to entrapment and compression of the deep part, potentially resulting in selective paralysis of the muscles served by this nerve (the extensor muscles and the abductor pollicis longus.) Many possible causes are known for this nerve syndrome, known as supinator entrapment syndrome, including compression by various soft-tissued masses surrounding the nerve, and stress caused by repetitive supination and pronation.

Variation

The deep radial nerve passes through the belly of supinator in 70% of cases and via the arcade of Frohse in remaining cases.

Function

Encircling the radius, supinator brings the hand into the supinated position. In contrast to the biceps brachii, it is able to do this in all positions of elbow flexion and extension.

Supinator always acts together with biceps, except when the elbow joint is extended.{{cite web | access-date = 22 March 2011

History

Etymology

The term "supinator" can also refer more generally to a muscle that causes supination of a part of the body. In older texts, the term "supinator longus" was used to refer to the brachioradialis, and "supinator brevis" was used to describe the muscle now known as the supinator.

Additional images

|File:Gray214.png|Bones of left forearm. Posterior aspect. |File:Musculussupinator.png|Front of the left forearm. Deep muscles. |File:Gray419.png|Posterior surface of the forearm. Deep muscles. |File:Gray528.png|Ulnar and radial arteries. Deep view. |File:Gray529.png|Arteries of the back of the forearm and hand. |File:Slide1TTTTT.JPG|Supinator muscle |File:Muscles of upper limb.(cross section - human cadaver).jpg|Muscles of upper limb. Cross section. |File:Elbow joint - deep dissection (anterior view, human cadaver).jpg|Elbow joint. Deep dissection. Anterior view.

Notes

References

  • {{cite journal | last1 = Boles | first1 = CA | url-access = subscription
  • {{cite journal | last1 = Chien | first1 = A | url-access = subscription}}
  • {{cite journal | last1 = Duqion | first1 = TR
  • {{cite book | last = Platzer | first = W
  • {{cite book | editor-last1 = Ross | editor-first1 = Lawrence M. | editor-last2 = Lamperti | editor-first2 = Edward D.

References

  1. {{harvnb. Platzer. 2004
  2. Gray, Henry. (2010). "Gray's Anatomy: Descriptive and Surgical". Cosimo Classics.
  3. Yost, William A.. (2006-01-01). "Neural Anatomy and Physiology". BRILL.
  4. {{harvnb. Ross. Lamperti. 2006
  5. {{harvnb. Chien. Jamadar. Jacobson. Hayes. 2003
  6. {{harvnb. Boles. Kannam. Cardwell. 2000
  7. EDWARDS, R. (1992). "Anatomy and human movement: Structure and functionNigel Palastanga, Derek Field and Roger Soames. Published 1991 by Butterworth-Heinemann, Oxford. ISBN 0 7506 0134 5, 891 pp. Price £35". Neuromuscular Disorders.
  8. {{harvnb. Duqion. Chavan. Bisson. 2010
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