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Morphology and enzyme histochemistry of dorsal muscles of the cat neck
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1975
Year
Muscle FunctionTopographical AnatomyAnatomyComparative AnatomyOrthopaedic SurgeryGross AnatomyKinesiologyApplied AnatomySkeletal MuscleHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologySkeletal Muscle BiologyBiologyAxial SkeletonNeuroanatomyHead MovementPhysiologyEnzyme HistochemistryDorsal MusclesMedicineShoulder GirdleCat NeckCervical Spine
An examination has been made of the five dorsal muscles of the cat neck which insert into the lamboidal crest. The three larger muscles, splenius, biventer cervicis, and complexus, are characterized by the presence of tendinous inscriptions which serve as the insertion points of shorter muscle fibers which do not run the length of the muscle. Longer fibers are bound by the inscriptions and, thus can transmit tension developed by shorter fibers. These three muscles are multiply innervater by nerves emerging from upper cervical spinal roots. Multiple innervation is not associated with multiple end plates but with arrangement so that lower roots innervate a high proportion of short fibers and higher roots, a high proportion of long fibers. Occipitoscapularis and rectus capitis major are, by comparison, simple muscles, each with a single motor nerve. Of the muscles examined, occipitoscapularis alone does not have its origin on the vertebral column but on the scapula, and is unlikely to have any major function in head movement.