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Gluteus Maximus: Difference between revisions
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|peripheral innervation=Inferior gluteal nerve | |peripheral innervation=Inferior gluteal nerve | ||
|blood supply=Superior and inferior gluteal arteries | |blood supply=Superior and inferior gluteal arteries | ||
|nerve supply=[[Inferior Gluteal Nerve]] (L5, S1 and S2 nerve roots) | |||
|nerve supply=Inferior | |||
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The gluteus maximus muscle is the largest and most superficial of the three gluteal muscles. During the normal gait, the hamstrings provide most hip extension rather than the gluteus maximus. | The gluteus maximus muscle is the largest and most superficial of the three gluteal muscles. During the normal gait, the hamstrings provide most hip extension rather than the gluteus maximus. |
Revision as of 08:14, 18 April 2022
This article is a stub.
Gluteus Maximus | |
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Muscle Type | |
Origin | Gluteal surface of ilium, lumbar fascia, sacrum, sacrotuberous ligament |
Insertion | Greater trochanter of the femur and iliotibial tract |
Action | External rotation and extension of the hip joint, supports the extended knee through the iliotibial tract, chief antigravity muscle in sitting and abduction of the hip |
Synergists | |
Antagonists | Iliacus, Psoas Major, Psoas Minor |
Spinal innervation | L5, S1, S2 |
Peripheral Innervation | Inferior gluteal nerve |
Vasculature | Superior and inferior gluteal arteries |
The gluteus maximus muscle is the largest and most superficial of the three gluteal muscles. During the normal gait, the hamstrings provide most hip extension rather than the gluteus maximus.
Gluteus Maximus Lurch
Normally the gluteus maximus contracts at the point of heel strike, arresting hip flexion, and thereby slowing forward motion of the trunk. A weakened gluteus maximus causes a backwards lurch (trunk extension) at heel strike on the weakened side, interrupting the forward motion of the trunk. This compensates for the weakness of hip extension.