Upper molars
Strictly speaking, the only permanent tooth with a regularly occurring transverse ridge is the mandibular first premolar. However, on very rare occasions the maxillary first premolar and maxillary first molar may have a transverse ridge as well. There is still disagreement determining the frequency that the buccal and lingual triangular ridges meet without being interrupted by the central groove.
There are 4 muscles that make up your abdominal muscle anatomy: rectus abdominis, external oblique, internal oblique, and transverse abdominis.
Yes, it is. It lies below the external oblique. The transverse lies below both obliques making the external superficial to the other two.
External Oblique Internal Oblique Transversus Abdominis REctus Abdominis
no
greenstick, fissured, comminuted, transverse, oblique, spinal
The four layers are the external oblique, internal oblique, transverse abdominis and rectus abdominis.
The four layers are the external oblique, internal oblique, transverse abdominis and rectus abdominis.
External oblique, internal oblique, and transversus abdominis
A cut along the transverse plane= transverse or cross section. *(If cut at an angle= oblique section).
I believe you are looking for the adductor hallucis which has a transverse and and oblique head.
A transverse fracture is a bone fracture which runs at a right angle to the length (axis) of the bone. See link in Related links for more discussion of categories of fractures-- * linear, oblique or transverse * simple or compound * complete or incomplete
On the back side, you have quadratus lumborum. Then you have external oblique, internal oblique and transverse abdominis muscles. Then you have that six pack muscle, called as rectus abdominis, in the center of the abdomen.