musculus abductor pollicis
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Definition
Noun: * The abductor muscle of the thumb: A specific skeletal muscle located in the hand, primarily responsible for moving the thumb away from the palm and the other fingers (abduction).
Usage
This term is used in highly specialized contexts, primarily in anatomy, medicine, and biology. It refers to a precise anatomical structure. * The surgeon carefully identified the musculus abductor pollicis during the reconstructive hand surgery. * An injury to the musculus abductor pollicis can significantly weaken the grip.
Advanced Usage
- Anatomical Description: The term is often used in detailed anatomical descriptions, textbooks, and medical reports. It is part of a standardized Latin nomenclature (Nomina Anatomica) used worldwide to avoid ambiguity.
- The musculus abductor pollicis originates from the scaphoid and trapezium bones and inserts into the base of the proximal phalanx of the thumb.
Variants and Related Words
- Abductor pollicis (muscle): A common shortened form used in medical parlance, omitting "musculus."
- The patient has tenderness over the abductor pollicis.
- Abductor pollicis brevis: A more specific term for the superficial part of this muscle group.
- Abduction (n): The movement of drawing a limb away from the midline of the body. This is the action performed by this muscle.
- Pollicis: A Latin genitive form meaning "of the thumb," used in several thumb muscle names (e.g., , ).
Synonyms
- Abductor pollicis muscle: The direct English translation and functional descriptor.
- Thumb abductor: A plain, non-technical description of its function.
Notes on Meaning
This term has a single, precise anatomical meaning. It does not have idiomatic or figurative uses. Its meaning is constant across medical and scientific English.
Noun
- the abductor muscle of the thumb