The radius is a bone in the forearm, not a muscle.
forearm
Kidney, Uterus, Vagina, Tongue, Muscle, Finger, Ureter, Radius
The brachioradialis muscle inserts onto the styloid process of the radius in the forearm.
There is no muscle that attaches at the shoulder blade and the radius. The radius is one of two bones in the forearm.
There are several, the main one being the biceps brachii.
radius
it is a bone present in lower fore arm, along your thumb....... not at all a muscle....
that is an enormously vague and unhelpful question. there are many muscles in the body. Skeletal muscles attach to bones Smooth (invoulentary) muscles generally attatch to and originate in tissues Cardiac (heart) muscle is contained within the heart. These are the three types of muscle in the body. Some common examples: biceps brachii muscle: scapula and radius pectoralis major muscle: ribs, clavicle, sternum and humerus.
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 most stronger muscle in your body is your leg muscle because it holed everithing in your body.
After you work out, you rip muscle tissue and your body builds the muscle back. Thus, forming muscle on top of muscle.
the ciliary muscle is the smooth muscle of the ciliary body