it is a bone present in lower fore arm, along your thumb....... not at all a muscle....
The radius is a bone in the forearm, not a muscle.
There are several, the main one being the biceps brachii.
radius
There is no muscle that attaches at the shoulder blade and the radius. The radius is one of two bones in the forearm.
The biceps brachii muscle inserts on the radius bone. It originates from the scapula and crosses both the shoulder and elbow joints to insert on the radius, allowing it to flex the elbow and supinate the forearm.
The forearm acts as a lever to move the hand and wrist. When flexing the forearm, the biceps muscle applies force to pull the radius bone towards the humerus bone, resulting in upward movement of the hand. When extending the forearm, the triceps muscle applies force to push the radius bone away from the humerus bone, resulting in downward movement of the hand.
The radius is a long bone.
Cells comprise bone and muscle, they do not have bone and muscle in them.
Your Radius is on the thumb side of ur body.
tendons:bones to muscle ligaments:bonr to bone
Ligaments attach bone to bone. Tendons attach muscles to bone.No, the origin is the attachment of a muscle to a stationary bone. You may have commonly heard of this as a "fixed end".
Origin and Insertion One of the points of attachment is the ORIGIN (typically the non-moving point of attachment). The other point of attachment is the INSERTION (typically the moving point of attachment). For example - when the brachialis muscle (located on the upper arm) contracts - it shortens the distance between the origin (on the humerus - the upper arm bone and the insertion (on the radius - the forearm bone). The humerus does not move, but the radius does move - it moves closer to the humerus.