carpal tunal syndrome cirugy on both hands
The wrist is distal to the shoulder. The shoulder is proximal to the wrist.
The abbreviation for a wrist strain is generally "WS."
The elbow is distal to the shoulder but proximal to the wrist
Proximal vs. distal, is in reference to the Point of attachment to the axial skeleton. So the shoulder is proximal to the wrist, or the wrist is distal to the shoulder. Distal= further away Proximal= closer
Distal is away from the center of body trunk or point of attachment. The wrist is farther away from center of body trunk. Proximal is closest to the body central axis or point of attachment, so the shoulder is proximal.
Dot matrix
The tendon that extends from the wrist to the shoulder is the biceps tendon.
nope. easy way to remember: proximal=proximity, hence closer to the body, and distal=distance, hence further away from the body. so the wrist is distal to the shoulder, and the shoulder is proximal to the wrist. make sense?
The wrist and the shoulder can be considered attachment areas of the arm. The arm is attached to - the neck at the shoulder - the torso (chest, back) at the sides of the shoulder and the armpit - the hand at the wrist
The scapula is commonly known as the shoulder bone.
It might; however we have elbows. If the gun was held in an arm with no wrist, or a tightly bound wrist, and the gun had a high enough kick-back, the arm would probably bend at the elbow and possibly whack the person in the face. If the person had a completely unbendable arm, then the shoulder would probably get dislocated after firing the gun, provided that the gun, again, has a high kick-back. Hope that helps you :)
what resistance isometric movement is common painful if strain of the wrist muscle present? what resistance isometric movement is common painful if strain of the wrist muscle present?