Thanks for your comment- I ve never heard this,.. lavator means lift,.. how can it downward rotate? Maybe I just don’t understand you quite right,.. anyway have a good day,..
@@AnatomyLab I know it took me a while to understand - a long time. (I am very slow at this stuff until I get it.) But if you look at how the shoulder blade moves down, the top corner of the shoulder where the levator attaches moves upwards towards the cervical spine. The shoulder blade rotates as it moves up and down. It doesn't just move vertically up and down.
I see how one would come to this conclusion,.. I think this only applies if the arm is fixed ,because I highly doubt anyone can isolate the Legato r scapulae to lift the shoulder- anyway thanks so much for geeking out! have a good one.
Thank you for making really nice anatomy tutorials for us visual learners!
you welcome! I m happy the videos are useful for you!
Visuals are great. I struggle with the accent a bit but turn sound off and subtitles on - still works. Thanks!
glad there are subtitles then,.. have a good one!
Great, very clear
thank you so much Andrea!
Brilliant.. love the work and would enjoy further education
Thank you James! There will be more! Have a good one ☝️
This channel always helping me!!! May god bless you
Thank you so much! Have an awesome day!
Thank you for your work on this video 🙏❤
you are welcome 🙏
These videos are absolutely insane! Thank you for making them
you are welcome! have a good one ☝️!
Thanks ❤
Amazing... Thank you ❤
You’re welcome. Have a nice day.
Nice video! Just a small detail. The levator scapulae is a downward rotator of the scapula. 👍🏻
Thanks for your comment- I ve never heard this,.. lavator means lift,.. how can it downward rotate? Maybe I just don’t understand you quite right,.. anyway have a good day,..
@@AnatomyLab I know it took me a while to understand - a long time. (I am very slow at this stuff until I get it.) But if you look at how the shoulder blade moves down, the top corner of the shoulder where the levator attaches moves upwards towards the cervical spine. The shoulder blade rotates as it moves up and down. It doesn't just move vertically up and down.
I see how one would come to this conclusion,.. I think this only applies if the arm is fixed ,because I highly doubt anyone can isolate the Legato r scapulae to lift the shoulder- anyway thanks so much for geeking out! have a good one.
such a good approach to this topic , well done and thank you :)
thank you, thank you and thank you so much 😊
I love it. Is my mirror😂
What does that mean?