Buccinator
The buccinator muscle, located in the cheeks, contracts to compress the cheeks when air is blown out of the mouth. This muscle helps in actions such as blowing out candles or whistling.
heart This muscle is called cardiac muscle. Each cell can beat on its' own if in a sterile dish. If it touched another, they will beat together.
smooth muscles in the wall of the esophagus.
No, there is no evidence of it. Dimples are natural indentations in your face, and they have nothing to do with sucking your cheeks. Some researchers believe they are a genetic characteristic, and if you possess the gene for dimples, you will have them. But other researchers disagree, saying they have not yet found which gene is responsible for dimples. But in either case, sucking in your cheeks probably would not give you permanent dimpling, since the skin is flexible and tends to bounce back.
The medial rectus muscle is responsible for moving the eyeball medially by contracting. This muscle is one of the extraocular muscles that control eye movements.
The Buccinator muscles. (The cheeks)
The buccinator muscle, located in the cheeks, contracts to compress the cheeks when air is blown out of the mouth. This muscle helps in actions such as blowing out candles or whistling.
Your glutious maximous is the muscle in your butt cheeks(:
Sandy Cheeks with her karate moves Break it down now, take it downtown.
Skeletal Muscles.
heart muscle
The muscle that moves the eyelids is called the orbicularis oculi muscle. It is responsible for closing the eyelids.
The cardiac muscle
muscle fibers contracting
The tongue and the cheeks
Pulling and contracting is how a muscle moves the bones ....
the diaphragm... ^_^