This muscle tissue accounts for the muscle tissue of the heart.
cardiac
Shoulder girdle muscle that performs every movement of the shoulder girdle except abduction.
What is the trapezius?
This muscle has an origin on the anterior superior iliac spine.
What is the sartorius?
This muscle group has an insertion on the superior aspect of the patella.
What are the quadriceps?
Muscle group that flexes the lower leg and extends the femur.
What are the hamstrings?
Muscle tissue found in the digestive tract
smooth
This muscle is responsible for abduction of the humerus.
What is the deltoid?
This muscle group have common origins on the ischial tuberosity.
What are the hamstrings?
This "SITS" muscle group inserts on the greater and lesser tubercle of the humerus.
What are the rotator cuff muscles?
These two muscles flex the lower arm when the hand is supinated.
What are the biceps brachii and the brachialis?
Muscle tissue that lines the urinary bladder.
What is smooth muscle?
This muscle of the hip quadriceps flexes the femur and extends the lower leg,
What is the rectus femoris?
Muscle that has an origin on the outer 1/3 of the spine of the scapula, acromion process, and outer 1/3 of the distal clavicle.
What is the deltoid?
These "calf" muscles insert on the calcaneous.
What are the soleus and gastrocnemius?
Name given to the muscles of the posterior spine that extend the head, neck, and spine.
What are the sacrospinalis or erector spinae?
Muscle tissue that accounts for the 650-700 muscles of the human body.
What is skeletal muscular tissue?
Muscle of the abdominal wall that compresses the abdomen.
What is the transverse abdominis?
Shoulder girdle muscle that originates on the spinous process of the 7th cervical vertebral vertebra and the spines of t-1 to t-7.
What are the rhomboids?
Lower arm flexor that inserts on the radial
What is the biceps?
These two muscles abduct the scapulae.
What are the pectoralis minors and serratus anteriors?
This muscle tissue is striated, uninucleate, and involuntary.
What is cardiac muscle tissue?
These two muscles are responsible for powerful elevation of the mandible.
What are the temporalis and masseter?
These muscles elevate the scapula and originate on the transverse processes of the first four cervical vertebrae.
What are the levator scapulae?
Muscle that inserts on the ramus of the mandible.
What is the masseter?
Two muscles primarily responsible for plantar flexion of the foot at the ankle joint.
What are the soleus and gastrocnemius?