Muscle Origin/Insertion Lookup
Find muscle origin, insertion, actions, innervation, and blood supply for any skeletal muscle. Essential anatomy reference tool.
ClinicalSearch or select a body region to find muscles.
How to Use
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1
Search for a muscle by name or region
Enter a muscle name such as 'biceps brachii' or browse by body region (e.g., anterior compartment of the arm) to locate the target muscle within the TA2-organized catalogue.
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2
View origin, insertion, and attachments
The tool displays bony attachment points using TA2 osseous landmark terminology, distinguishing the proximal origin (typically stationary during contraction) from the distal insertion (typically mobile), along with tendon morphology notes.
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3
Analyze innervation, action, and clinical notes
Review the muscle's nerve supply (peripheral nerve and spinal root levels), primary and secondary actions, and clinical correlations including common injury patterns, referred pain zones, and surgical access considerations.
About
Skeletal muscle anatomy forms the biomechanical foundation of human movement, rehabilitation science, and surgical planning. The human body contains approximately 650 named skeletal muscles, each with defined bony attachments, neurovascular supply, and functional roles catalogued in Terminologia Anatomica 2nd edition. Understanding origin and insertion points is not merely academic — it determines the direction of muscle pull, predicts deformity patterns in nerve injuries or compartment syndromes, and guides tendon transfer surgery in reconstructive procedures.
The Muscle Origin-Insertion tool provides structured access to attachment data using precise TA2 osteological landmark terminology. For each muscle, the tool presents the origin and insertion with reference to bony features such as the linea aspera, greater trochanter, or medial epicondyle, along with tendon morphology (flat aponeurosis, round tendon, pennate arrangement). Spinal root levels follow the standard myotome maps used in clinical neurology, and peripheral nerve assignments reflect the organization of major nerve territories including the brachial plexus and lumbosacral plexus.
For physical therapists, orthopedic surgeons, and sports medicine clinicians, the clinical correlations embedded in each muscle entry are particularly valuable. These include common injury mechanisms (e.g., distal biceps rupture from eccentric loading), characteristic deformity patterns (e.g., 'Popeye' sign in proximal long head biceps tendon rupture), referred pain patterns derived from Travell and Simons' Myofascial Pain and Dysfunction, and rehabilitation principles aligned with the American Physical Therapy Association's movement system framework.
FAQ
What is the difference between muscle origin and insertion?
How are muscle actions described in the tool?
What nerve root levels are provided for each muscle?
Are deep intrinsic muscles included, not just superficial ones?
Can this tool help me understand muscle testing grades?
Educational Disclaimer
This content is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider for medical decisions.
Data sources: Terminologia Anatomica, Foundational Model of Anatomy, Wikidata.