
|
|
|
|
|
Scatty Cats online resource for cat
lovers, breeders and owners. |
|||
|
|
The Latissimus dorsi is the large, flat, dorso-lateral muscle on the trunk, posterior to the arm, and partly covered by the spinotrapezius on its median dorsal region. The Latissimus dorsi is a triangular, flat muscle, which covers the lumbar region and the lower half of the thoracic region, and is gradually contracted into a narrow fasciculus at its insertion into the humerus. It arises by tendinous fibers from the spinous processes of the lower six thoracic vertebræ and from the posterior layer of the lumbodorsal fascia, by which it is attached to the spines of the lumbar and sacral vertebræ, to the supraspinal ligament, and to the posterior part of the crest of the ilium. It also arises by muscular fibers from the external lip of the crest of the ilium lateral to the margin of the Sacrospinalis, and from the three or four lower ribs by fleshy digitations, which are interposed between similar processes of the Obliquus abdominis externus. From this extensive origin the fibers pass in different directions, the upper ones horizontally, the middle obliquely upward, and the lower vertically upward, so as to converge and form a thick fasciculus, which crosses the inferior angle of the scapula, and usually receives a few fibers from it. The muscle curves around the lower border of the Teres major, and is twisted upon itself, so that the superior fibers become at first posterior and then inferior, and the vertical fibers at first anterior and then superior. It ends in a quadrilateral tendon, about 7 cm. long, which passes in front of the tendon of the Teres major, and is inserted into the bottom of the intertubercular groove of the humerus; its insertion extends higher on the humerus than that of the tendon of the Pectoralis major. The lower border of its tendon is united with that of the Teres major, the surfaces of the two being separated near their insertions by a bursa; another bursa is sometimes interposed between the muscle and the inferior angle of the scapula. The tendon of the muscle gives off an expansion to the deep fascia of the arm. Variations.—The number of dorsal vertebræ to which it is attached vary from four to seven or eight; the number of costal attachments varies; muscle fibers may or may not reach the crest of the ilium. A muscular slip, the axillary arch, varying from 7 to 10 cm. in length, and from 5 to 15 mm. in breadth, occasionally springs from the upper edge of the Latissimus dorsi about the middle of the posterior fold of the axilla, and crosses the axilla in front of the axillary vessels and nerves, to join the under surface of the tendon of the Pectoralis major, the Coracobrachialis, or the fascia over the Biceps brachii. This axillary arch crosses the axillary artery, just above the spot usually selected for the application of a ligature, and may mislead the surgeon during the operation. It is present in about 7 per cent. of subjects and may be easily recognized by the transverse direction of its fibers. A fibrous slip usually passes from the lower border of the tendon of the Latissimus dorsi, near its insertion, to the long head of the Triceps brachii. This is occasionally muscular, and is the representative of the Dorsoepitrochlearis brachii of apes. The lateral margin of the Latissimus dorsi is separated below from the Obliquus externus abdominis by a small triangular interval, the lumbar triangle of Petit, the base of which is formed by the iliac crest, and its floor by the Obliquus internus abdominis. Another triangle is situated behind the scapula. It is bounded above by the Trapezius, below by the Latissimus dorsi, and laterally by the vertebral border of the scapula; the floor is partly formed by the Rhomboideus major. If the scapula be drawn forward by folding the arms across the chest, and the trunk bent forward, parts of the sixth and seventh ribs and the interspace between them become subcutaneous and available for ausculation. The space is therefore known as the triangle of ausculation. Nerves.—The Trapezius is supplied by the accessory nerve, and by branches from the third and fourth cervical nerves; the Latissimus dorsi by the sixth, seventh, and eighth cervical nerves through the thoracodorsal (long subscapular) nerve. TrainingTo increase the power of this muscle, the muscle can be trained with the following exercices:
External linksThis article was originally based on an entry from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy. As such, some of the information contained herein may be outdated
|
||
|
UK Cat Breeders & Catteries
|
|||
|
Cat Web Sites |
|||
|
Cat Sitting,
Cat Sitters,
About Cats,
Cats
Kittens,
Cat Breeds,
Cat Breeders,
Cat Links,
Cat Sites,
Catteries,
Feline,
Cat Owners,
Cat Sitting,
Cat Forums,
Ailurophilia,
Cat Fanciers,
Felidae World,
Feline Rescue,
Feline World |
|||
|
England Bedfordshire Cat Sitters Berkshire Cat Sitters Bristol Cat Sitters Buckinghamshire Cat Sitters Cambridgeshire Cat Sitters Cheshire Cat Sitters Durham Cat Sitters Cornwall Cat Sitters Cumbria Cat Sitters Derbyshire Cat Sitters Devon Cat Sitters Dorset Cat Sitters East Sussex Cat Sitters East Yorkshire Cat Sitters Essex Cat Sitters Gloucestershire Cat Sitters Hampshire Cat Sitters Herefordshire Cat Sitters Hertfordshire Cat Sitters Isle of Wight Cat Sitters Kent Cat Sitters Lancashire Cat Sitters Leicestershire Cat Sitters Lincolnshire Cat Sitters London Cat Sitters Manchester Cat Sitters Merseyside Cat Sitters Norfolk Cat Sitters North Yorkshire Cat Sitters Northamptonshire Cat Sitters Northumberland Cat Sitters Nottinghamshire Cat Sitters Oxfordshire Cat Sitters Shropshire Cat Sitters Somerset Cat Sitters South Yorkshire Cat Sitters Staffordshire Cat Sitters Suffolk Cat Sitters Surrey Cat Sitters Tyne and Wear Cat Sitters Warwickshire Cat Sitters West Midlands Cat Sitters West Sussex Cat Sitters West Yorkshire Cat Sitters Wiltshire Cat Sitters Worcestershire Cat Sitters Scotland Aberdeen Cat Sitters Aberdeenshire Cat Sitters Angus Cat Sitters Argyll Cat Sitters Clackmannanshire Cat Sitters Dumfries Cat Sitters Dundee Cat Sitters East Ayrshire Cat Sitters East Dunbartonshire Cat Sitters East Lothian Cat Sitters East Renfrewshire Cat Sitters Edinburgh Cat Sitters Falkirk Cat Sitters Fife Cat Sitters Glasgow Cat Sitters Highland Cat Sitters Inverclyde Cat Sitters Mid Lothian Cat Sitters Moray Cat Sitters North Ayrshire Cat Sitters North Lanarkshire Cat Sitters Orkney Islands Cat Sitters Perth Cat Sitters Renfrewshire Cat Sitters Scottish Borders Cat Sitters Shetland Islands Cat Sitters South Ayrshire Cat Sitters South Lanarkshire Cat Sitters Stirling Cat Sitters West Dunbartonshire Cat Sitters West Lothian Cat Sitters Western Isles Cat Sitters Wales Anglesey Cat Sitters Blaenau Gwent Cat Sitters Bridgend Cat Sitters Caerphilly Cat Sitters Cardiff Cat Sitters Carmarthenshire Cat Sitters Ceredigion Cat Sitters Conwy Cat Sitters Denbighshire Cat Sitters Flintshire Cat Sitters Gwynedd Cat Sitters Merthyr Tydfil Cat Sitters Monmouthshire Cat Sitters Neath Port Talbot Cat Sitters Newport Cat Sitters Pembrokeshire Cat Sitters Powys Cat Sitters Rhondda Cynon Taff Cat Sitters Swansea Cat Sitters Torfaen Cat Sitters Vale of Glamorgan Cat Sitters Wrexham Cat Sitters Ireland Carlow Cat Sitters Cavan Cat Sitters Clare Cat Sitters Cork Cat Sitters Donegal Cat Sitters Dublin Cat Sitters Galway Cat Sitters Kerry Cat Sitters Kildare Cat Sitters Kilkenny Cat Sitters Laois Cat Sitters Leitrim Cat Sitters Limerick Cat Sitters Longford Cat Sitters Louth Cat Sitters Mayo Cat Sitters Meath Cat Sitters Monaghan Cat Sitters Offaly Cat Sitters Roscommon Cat Sitters Sligo Cat Sitters Tipperary Cat Sitters Waterford Cat Sitters Westmeath Cat Sitters Wexford Cat Sitters Wicklow Cat Sitters Northern Ireland Antrim Cat Sitters Armagh Cat Sitters Down Cat Sitters Fermanagh Cat Sitters Londonderry Cat Sitters Tyrone Cat Sitters |
|||
|
|
|||
|
Scatty Cats online resource for
cat lovers, breeders and owners.
About Cats is licensed under
the GNU Free
Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
|
|||