3/4…I think I’m confused. My anatomy teacher must’ve taught us that the soleus and gastrocnemius are the same!!! Same for my personal training class!!!! I keep getting that one wrong!
Soleus and Gastrocnemius do the SAME MOTOR function however the gastrocnemiis is a 2 JOINT muscle while soleus is a 1 JOINT muscle What he saying is what muscle is being activated solely on that PLANTAR flexion while in knee flexion position Gastric will assist but Soleus is being worked the most
When or if you do try to find out the length or tightness of the calf muscle depending on knee flexion/extension will determine the hypertonic of that muscle Such as when performing knee flexion and the PF muscle is limited in ROM but when going back to knee extension and the PF is back to normal ROM most likely the gastrocnemius is tight If there is still restriction of PF mobility extensions regardless of knee extension/ flexion, the tightness will be present in soleus
@@BlitzFreeze I think that’s what is confusing me. I just recall our (honestly, horrible anatomy lab teacher) calling the gastrocnemius and soleus the same….so that’s probably a mess up on her end, but thank you for explaining it to me!!! Now I know
2/4, but I'm only 14 and didn't know what half of those terms meant, so i think I did pretty good 😭
Me too lol
3 out of 4 right
Bíceps braquial is the last one.
4/4
3/4 soleus had me confused 😅
3/4…I think I’m confused. My anatomy teacher must’ve taught us that the soleus and gastrocnemius are the same!!! Same for my personal training class!!!! I keep getting that one wrong!
Soleus and Gastrocnemius do the SAME MOTOR function however the gastrocnemiis is a 2 JOINT muscle while soleus is a 1 JOINT muscle
What he saying is what muscle is being activated solely on that PLANTAR flexion while in knee flexion position
Gastric will assist but Soleus is being worked the most
When or if you do try to find out the length or tightness of the calf muscle depending on knee flexion/extension will determine the hypertonic of that muscle
Such as when performing knee flexion and the PF muscle is limited in ROM but when going back to knee extension and the PF is back to normal ROM most likely the gastrocnemius is tight
If there is still restriction of PF mobility extensions regardless of knee extension/ flexion, the tightness will be present in soleus
@@BlitzFreeze I think that’s what is confusing me. I just recall our (honestly, horrible anatomy lab teacher) calling the gastrocnemius and soleus the same….so that’s probably a mess up on her end, but thank you for explaining it to me!!! Now I know
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4/4 I just like lifting
4/4 but I’m a PTA