Erector Spinae
Erector Spinae. These muscles extend the spine and maintain the vertebral column in an erect posture.
The kidneys are in the retroperitoneal space, located inferior to the diaphragm, lateral to the vertebral column, and deep to the peritoneal cavity.
The muscle that lies in the lamina groove is the multifidus muscle. This deep muscle is part of the intrinsic back muscles and is situated along the vertebral column, filling the space between the spinous and transverse processes. The multifidus plays a crucial role in stabilizing the spine and assisting with movements such as rotation and extension. Its location in the lamina groove helps it effectively support spinal alignment and posture.
The multifidus muscles are deep, intrinsic muscle of the spine. Deep in that it has overlying musculature, intrinsic in that they originate and insert to the spine. The multifidi, along with the rotatores and semispinalis are collective referred to as the transversospinalis muscles given that they orriginate from the transverse processes of the spine & insert on the spinous processes of the spine. The multifidi themselves only span about 2-3 vertebral segments (bones in your back). The transversospinalis group lays deep to the larger erector spinae, which is a midline intrinsic back muscle group.
A deep muscle is deeper in the body and a superficial muscle is closer to the surface.
CPT Code - biopsy, deep muscle: 20205
Ulcer
where is the deep fascia located on a diagramph of a skeletal muscle
epimysium in the skeletal muscle, plasma membrane of the muscle cell is not sarcoplasm but rather sarcolemma
Yes, all muscles are deep to skin
yes
When applying acute pressure with deep strokes, a hypertonic muscle will release.