Title: A Review of the Shoulder Muscles and Their Actions
1A Review of the Shoulder Muscles and Their Actions
2Questions
- What muscle works closely with the anterior
deltoid? - Pectoralis major
- What muscle is involved in any lifting movements?
- Deltoid
- What is the major (strongest) extensor muscle?
- Latissimus Dorsi
- Name the four rotator cuff muscles.
- Subscapularis, Supraspinatus, Infraspinatus, and
Teres minor. - What muscle works closely with the infraspinatus?
- Teres minor
3Practice
- Name the muscles for Horizontal Adduction
- Pect Major (both)
- Corachobrachialis
- Deltoid (anterior)
- Name the muscles for Horizontal Abduction
- Deltoid (post)
- Infraspinatus
- Teres minor
- Lats
4Practice
- List the muscles that do flexion of the shoulder
- Coracobrachialis
- Pectoralis major (upper to 60)
- Anterior Deltoid
- List the muscles that do extension of the
shoulder - Latissimus dorsi
- Teres major
- Posterior deltoid
- Pectoralis major (lower fibers to neutral)
5Practice
- List the muscles that do adduction of the
shoulder - Pectoralis major (lower and upper below 90)
- Coracobrachialis
- Latissimus dorsi
- Teres major
- List the muscles that do abduction of the
shoulder - Deltoid (all sections)
- Supraspinatus
- Pectoralis major (upper past 90)
6Practice
- List the muscles that do internal rotation of the
shoulder - Subscapularis
- Latissimus dorsi
- Teres major
- Anterior deltoid
- Pect. major
- List the muscles that do external rotation of the
shoulder - Infraspinatus
- Teres minor
- Posterior deltoid
7Name the muscle.
Coracobrachialis
Name the action
Adduction of the shoulder Also, flexion and hor.
add.
8Name the muscle.
Pectoralis Major
9Name the muscle.
Subscapularis
Name the action
Internal rotation of the shoulder
10Name the muscle.
Deltoid
Name the action
Abduction of shoulder
11Name the muscle.
Infraspinatus
Name the action
External rotation
12Name the action
Name the muscle.
Adduction of scapula
Teres Major
13Name the muscle.
Teres Minor
Name the action if the humerus move directly to
the posterior
Extension of the shoulder
14Name the muscle.
Supraspinatus
Name the action
Abduction of the shoulder
15Coracobrachialis
Pect. Major
Subscapularis
Deltoid
16Supraspinatus
Teres Major
Infraspinatus
Teres Minor
17What position are her shoulders in?
Flexion
18What position is his right shoulder in?
Horizontal Abduction and External Rotation
19What rotation action is his shoulder performing
as he continues to through the ball?
Internal Rotation
20What position are her shoulders in?
Flexion
21What position are his shoulders in?
Horizontal abduction or Extension
22Position of their shoulders?
2.
1.
Extension
Flexion
23What is the position of shoulders?
Extension
24Shoulder Muscle Exercises
25Major Muscles of the Shoulder
- Pectoralis major
- Push-ups
- Pull-ups
- Bench press
- Throwing
- Tennis serve
- Latissimus dorsi
- Chinning
- Robe climb
- Dips on parallel bars
- Pullover exercises
- Pulldown exercises
- Rowing
26Shoulder action ? Shoulder muscle(s) ?
Deltoid Supraspinatus
Abduction
27Shoulder action ? Shoulder muscle(s) ?
Flexion
Ant Deltoid Upper Pect Major Coracobrach.
28Shoulder action ? Shoulder muscle(s) ?
Ant. Deltoid Pect. Major (both) Coracobrachialis
Horizontal Add.
29Shoulder action ? Shoulder muscle(s) ?
Horizontal Abduction
Latissimus Dorsi Post. Deltoid Teres
Minor Infraspinatus
30Shoulder action ? Shoulder muscle(s) ?
Adduction
Pect. Major (both) Coracobrachialis Latissimus
Dorsi Teres Major
31Shoulder action ? Shoulder muscle(s) ?
Horizontal Add
Ant. Deltoid Pect. Major (both) Coracobrachialis
32Shoulder action ? Shoulder muscle(s) ?
Extension
Lats Teres Major Post. Deltoid Pectoralis Major
(lower) Infraspinatus Teres minor
33Shoulder action ? Shoulder muscle(s) ?
External Rotation
Infrspinatus Teres Minor Post. Deltoid
34Name a shoulder muscle isolated with the
following exercises.
- Side arm dumbbell raises
- Deltoid
- Push-ups
- Pectoralis major
- Rowing and pull-overs
- Latissimus dorsi
35What is the action to the left? What muscles
perform that action?
External Rotation
Internal Rotation
Internal Rotation
Subscapularis, Ant. Deltoid, Pect, Major, Lats.
And Teres Major
36Rotator Cuff Exercises
External Rotation
Internal Rotation
External Rotation
Abduction (to work the supraspinatus)
37Shoulder Related Injuries
- The shoulder is built for motion, not stability
- Injury rate depends on
- Shallowness of glenoid fossa
- Laxity of ligaments
- Strength of muscles
38- Shoulder subluxation
- Incomplete or partial dislocation
- Shoulder dislocation
- Complete dislocation of the GH joint
- Most common anteriorly and inferiorly
- Shoulder separation
- Complete dislocation of the AC joint
39Shoulder Dislocation
40Impingement Syndrome
41Impingement Syndrome
- A condition that decreases the subacromial space
- Acromion process
- Coracoacromial ligament
- Causes
- Swelling
- Bone spurs
- Anatomical structureÂ
42Impingement Syndrome
43Rotator Cuff Tears
44Rotator cuff
- Subscapularis
- Supraspinatus
- Infraspinatus
- Teres minor
45Movement of RC Muscles
- Subscapularis is an internal rotator of the arm.
- Supraspinatus assists the deltoid in abducting
the arm, with its greatest contribution being the
initiation of abduction. - Infraspinatus and teres minor muscles both
externally rotate the arm.
46Rotator Cuff Injury
- The throwing motion has been divided into five
phases wind-up, cocking, acceleration, and
follow-through. - Cocking phase
- Subscapularis fires in late cocking phase to
decelerate the shoulder's external rotation.
Also, it is stretched during the cocking phase.
47Rotator Cuff Injury
- Follow-through (muscles fire most intensely)
- Subscapularis internally rotates the shoulder,
- The infraspinatus and teres minor contract
eccentrically to decelerate the arm and are
stretched. - During this repetitive eccentric loading, the
rotator cuff is prone to overload, fatigue,
tendinitis, and even a partial undersurface tear.
48(No Transcript)
49Note Surgery needs to be performed within 3
months or the supraspinatus muscle will atrophy
and be too short to reattach
50Glenoid Labrum
51Labral Tear
- The glenoid cavity makes up the socket of the
shoulder joint. - The labrum acts sort of like a gasket, turning
the flat surface of the glenoid into a deeper
socket that molds to the head of the humerus for
a better fit. - A tear of labrum can cause pain and a catching
sensation with movement of the shoulder.Â
52Labral Tear
- Most labral tears are probably the result of an
injury to the shoulder, such as falling on an
outstretched hand. - There is reason to believe that the excess motion
of the humerus moving around on the glenoid may
cause damage to the labrum over time.  - An unstable shoulder may also cause injury to the
labrum, if it repeatedly dislocates out of the
glenoid.