The origin is the shoulder; the scapula I believe is where it connects to.
yes
The biceps tendon originates from the scapula (shoulder blade) and inserts into the radius bone in the forearm.
biceps femoris
The biceps brachii muscles, commonly called the "biceps muscle," its insertion on the radial tuberosity. The origin is actually in two places, one for each head of the biceps - the short head originates from the coracoid process of the scapula and the long head originates from the supraglenoid tubercle.
The biceps brachii muscles, commonly called the "biceps muscle," its insertion on the radial tuberosity. The origin is actually in two places, one for each head of the biceps - the short head originates from the coracoid process of the scapula and the long head originates from the supraglenoid tubercle.
That would be your biceps muscle. The "two heads" in question are the muscle's two points of origin: on the coracoid process of the shoulder blade, and the glenoid cavity of the shoulder joint. The word "biceps" comes from the prefix bi-, meaning "two", and the root cap, "head" (the full Latin word for "head" is caput, capitis, n.). To be precise, this biceps is known as biceps brachii, the "biceps of the arm"; there's a second biceps in the thigh known as the biceps femoris.
The origin is the immovable end, while insertion is the movable end.Some muscles have more than one origin, like the biceps brachii. The insertion of the biceps brachii is attached to the radius of your forearm while the origins are located on your scapula.
dense regular connective tissue
Biceps debridement is removal of devitalized tissue from the biceps.
biceps are on your upper arm and triceps are below your biceps
The effector muscle is the biceps brachii.
Watch me flex my biceps. My biceps hurt.