Supination

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An example of an arm flexed in a supinated position with the biceps fully contracted.
An example of an arm flexed in a supinated position with the biceps fully contracted.

Supination is the rotation of the forearm so that the palm faces anteriorly, or palm facing up.

The hand is supine (facing anteriorly) in the anatomical position.

This action is performed by the Biceps brachii and the Supinator muscle.

It is the opposite of pronation.

Originally, supination of the forearm was attributed as a function of the brachioradialis muscle. However, the original idea of the biceps acting as a supinator was something hypothesised by Leonardo da Vinci, in a series of annotated drawings made between 1505 and 1510 (referred to as his Milanese period); in which the principle of the biceps as a supinator, as well as its role as a flexor to the elbow was devised. However, this function remained undiscovered by the medical community as Da Vinci was not regarded as a teacher of anatomy, nor were his results publicly released.

It was not until 1713, that this movement was re-discovered by William Cheselden, and subsequently recorded for the medical community, being rewritten several times by different authors wishing to present information to different audiences. Nevertheless, the most notable recent expansion upon Cheselden's recordings was achieved by Guillaume Duchenne in 1867 in a journal named Physiology of Motion, something which to this day is one of the major references on supination action of the biceps brachii.

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