vical vertebrae Match each term with its appropriate description. This muscle flexes your vertebral column to help you sit up when you get up out of bed in the morning. This muscle helps rotate the vertebral column, and it is the most superficial of the abdominal muscles This group of muscles extends your vertebral column after bending down external oblique rectus abdominus erector spinae
Match each term with its appropriate description.
The vertebra holds up the world! (Your head, actually) |
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This bone is formed by fused vertebrae, and it supports the entire vertebral column. |
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This portion of the vertebra supports the weight of the body. |
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You can palpate this part of the vertebra by reaching behind you and feeling the middle of your back. |
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This feature connects transverse process to the body of a vertebra. |
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This feature connects the transverse processes of a vertebra with its spinous process |
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These vertebrae have foramina through the transverse processes |
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These vertebrae have large bodies and short, blunt spinous processes. |
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Part of the central nervous system passes through this part of the vertebra. |
C1 Atlas
vertebral foramen
lumbar vertebrae
body
pedicle
spinous process
sacrum
cervical vertebrae
This muscle flexes your vertebral column to help you sit up when you get up out of bed in the morning. |
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This muscle helps rotate the vertebral column, and it is the most superficial of the abdominal muscles |
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This group of muscles extends your vertebral column after bending down |
external oblique
rectus abdominus
erector spinae
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