Frontal Plane
Shoulder circumduction is a multiplanar motion that occurs in the sagittal, frontal, and transverse planes. It involves a combination of flexion, extension, abduction, adduction, and internal and external rotation at the shoulder joint.
The range of motion in the shoulder abduction plane of motion is typically around 180 degrees, allowing the arm to move away from the body sideways.
Shoulder horizontal abduction occurs in the transverse plane. This movement involves moving the arm away from the midline of the body while keeping it parallel to the ground. It is an important movement for activities such as throwing, swimming, and reaching for objects to the side.
Non-axial. The only axis like movement the scapula has, is upper and lower rotation. Protraction (abduction) and Retraction (adduction) are translation motions.
Horizontal abduction refers to moving the arm away from the body in a horizontal plane, while adduction involves bringing the arm back towards the body in the same plane. In simpler terms, horizontal abduction is moving the arm out to the side, while adduction is bringing it back in towards the body.
Hip abduction, as well as hip adduction, is in the frontal plane.
Actions like walking, running, jumping, and kicking are most likely to occur in the sagittal plane as they involve movement forwards and backwards in relation to the body's midline. Activities such as bending forward or backward at the waist also predominantly occur in the sagittal plane.
Thumb abduction and adduction is in the sagittal plane. However, finger abduction and adduction is in the frontal/coronal plane. Do these movements in the anatomical position and that will help you see that the thumb is not abducting or adducting in the frontal plane rather the sagittal plane.
Extension
Shoulder circumduction is a multiplanar motion that occurs in the sagittal, frontal, and transverse planes. It involves a combination of flexion, extension, abduction, adduction, and internal and external rotation at the shoulder joint.
The range of motion in the shoulder abduction plane of motion is typically around 180 degrees, allowing the arm to move away from the body sideways.
Shoulder abduction occurs in the frontal plane of motion. This movement involves raising the arm laterally away from the body, typically in a direction perpendicular to the sagittal plane. It is primarily facilitated by muscles such as the deltoid and supraspinatus.
Shoulder horizontal abduction occurs in the transverse plane. This movement involves moving the arm away from the midline of the body while keeping it parallel to the ground. It is an important movement for activities such as throwing, swimming, and reaching for objects to the side.
Non-axial. The only axis like movement the scapula has, is upper and lower rotation. Protraction (abduction) and Retraction (adduction) are translation motions.
Demonstrate is a verb, not a noun. Abduction, in functional anatomy, is a movement which draws a limb away from the median sagittal plane of the body. You would demonstrate it by moving a limb away from the median sagittal plane of the body.
In my research. Abduction, in functional anatomy, is a movement which draws a limb away from the median (Sagittal) plane of the body. It is thus opposed to adduction.
Yes, abduction is movement away from the midline of the body. It occurs in the frontal plane and is the opposite of adduction, which is movement towards the midline.