supination
(noun)
the action of rotating the forearm so that the palm of the hand is turned up or forward
Examples of supination in the following topics:
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Muscles of the Humerus that Act on the Forearm
- Action - Supination of the forearm.
- Supinator - The supinator is located in the deep region of the forearm posterior compartment.
- Attachments - The supinator has two heads: one originating from the humerus, the other from the ulna.
- The biceps brachii is located in the anterior compartment of the upper arm and flexes and supinates the forearm at the elbow.
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Muscles of the Wrist and Hand
- Supinator - The supinator is located in the deep region of the forearm posterior compartment.
- Attachments - The supinator has two heads: one originates from the humerus, the other from the ulna.
- Abductor Pollicis Longus – The abductor pollicis longus is situated immediately distal to the supinator muscle.
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Anatomical Position
- The basis for the standard anatomical position in humans comes from the supine position used for examining human cadavers during autopsies.
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Stability and Range of Motion at Synovial Joints
- Certain joints exhibit special movements including elevation, depression, protraction, retraction, inversion, eversion, dorsiflexion, plantar flexion, supination, pronation, and opposition.
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Movement at Synovial Joints
- Supination is the movement of the radius and ulna bones of the forearm so that the palm faces forward or up.
- (g) Supination of the forearm turns the palm upward in which the radius and ulna are parallel, while forearm pronation turns the palm downward in which the radius crosses over the ulna to form an "X."
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Tennis Elbow, Little-League Elbow, and Dislocation of the Radial Head
- This causes significant pain, partial limitation of flexion/extension of the elbow, and total loss of pronation/supination in the affected arm.
- While applying compression between these two hands, the forearm of the patient is gently supinated and the arm flexed.
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Nephroptosis (Floating Kidney)
- Diagnosis is confirmed during intravenous urography, by obtaining erect and supine films.
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Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)
- Infants sleeping prone or exposed to tobacco smoke are at greater risk than infants sleeping supine or unexposed to tobacco smoke, respectively.
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Assessing CNS Disorders
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Art in the Second Millennium B.C.E.
- The Burney Relief is a Mesopotamian terracotta plaque in high relief of the Old-Babylonian period, depicting a winged, nude, goddess-like figure with bird's talons, flanked by owls, and perched upon supine lions.