The Complete Muscular System Poster
new version of the muscular system poster, designed from scratch, showcasing all the skeletal muscles in the human body. For many years there have been several other muscular system posters on the market - but none that in any way resemble ours.
Our version of the muscular system poster is original with illustrations prepared by our experienced illustrators. The poster is based on 3 cornerstones:
* Pedagogy in every detail - to create the most motivating learning and / or repetition
* Highest professional accuracy - to meet the highest professional requirements
* Aesthetics in the form of expression - to arouse the greatest possible curiosity and enthusiasm
Our intention is that the poster should replace the existing posters of the muscular system, which in our opinion are uneducative, professionally inadequate and outdated.
Target audience
The poster is targeted at anyone who wants the most learning-friendly, professionally correct and eye-catching overview of the skeletal muscles in the human body.
It is especially targeted at all kinds of anatomy students, all teachers of anatomy as well as all therapists who work with the body's muscles and / or musculoskeletal system as a whole.
Format
The poster measures 100 x 70 cm and is printed in Denmark on thick quality paper, which is particularly suitable for framing in a physical frame.
* Frame not included
Language
The poster is translated into several languages such as English, latin + Swedish, Danish, German and more to come.
Key Features
1) All muscles in the human body can be grouped, which is important when learning and remembering them. On our poster, all muscles are grouped logically, so that there is no doubt to which muscle group each individual muscle belongs. Examples of these muscle groups are the masticatory muscles of the jaw, the muscles of the neck and the thigh muscles. The muscle groupings on the poster are completely identical to the muscle groupings in the textbooks used at e.g. medical schools in Denmark.
- On older existing muscle posters, the muscles are not grouped, and for example you cannot see that the brachioradialis muscle belongs to the extensor muscles of the forearm.
2) In many places on the poster, the muscles are also named and illustrated in their layers or so-called lodges. For example, you can easily and quickly see the division of the neck muscles in layers (the superficial, the suprahyoid, the infrahyoid, the deep and the scalene muscles).
- On older existing muscle posters, layering is not seen.
3) A logical learning system based on matching colors, precise numbering and visual aids makes it easy to identify and connect each individual muscle group in the text sections to the detailed illustrations.
- On older existing muscle posters, the muscles and their names are shown randomly using visually disturbing lines and often mixed up, which for example makes it very difficult to identify the 4 paired masticatory muscles. This means that efforts to identify all these masticatory muscles can take the form of "looking for a needle in a haystack".
4) Clinical details are included on the poster, such as, for example, in which directions the eye muscles move the eyeball, conditions in the rectus sheath regarding linea arcuata, the inguinal canal in men, the rotator cuff in the shoulder and what functions the muscles in the throat have (e.g. tension and relaxation of the vocal cords).
- On older existing muscle posters, clinical details are not seen.
5) Labeling of muscles is written in correct and complete nomenclature. E.g. the Danish, Swedish and German version includes pure Latin, and all headings in the local language. Furthermore, explanatory text is written in local language as well. The English version uses English through out.
- On older existing muscle posters, complete nomenclature is missing and local language versions are rarely seen at all.
Key Features
1) All muscles in the human body can be grouped, which is important when learning and remembering them. On our poster, all muscles are grouped logically, so that there is no doubt to which muscle group each individual muscle belongs. Examples of these muscle groups are the masticatory muscles of the jaw, the muscles of the neck and the thigh muscles. The muscle groupings on the poster are completely identical to the muscle groupings in the textbooks used at e.g. medical schools in Denmark.
- On older existing muscle posters, the muscles are not grouped, and for example you cannot see that the brachioradialis muscle belongs to the extensor muscles of the forearm.
2) In many places on the poster, the muscles are also named and illustrated in their layers or so-called lodges. For example, you can easily and quickly see the division of the neck muscles in layers (the superficial, the suprahyoid, the infrahyoid, the deep and the scalene muscles).
- On older existing muscle posters, layering is not seen.
3) A logical learning system based on matching colors, precise numbering and visual aids makes it easy to identify and connect each individual muscle group in the text sections to the detailed illustrations.
- On older existing muscle posters, the muscles and their names are shown randomly using visually disturbing lines and often mixed up, which for example makes it very difficult to identify the 4 paired masticatory muscles. This means that efforts to identify all these masticatory muscles can take the form of "looking for a needle in a haystack".
4) Clinical details are included on the poster, such as, for example, in which directions the eye muscles move the eyeball, conditions in the rectus sheath regarding linea arcuata, the inguinal canal in men, the rotator cuff in the shoulder and what functions the muscles in the throat have (e.g. tension and relaxation of the vocal cords).
- On older existing muscle posters, clinical details are not seen.
5) Labeling of muscles is written in correct and complete nomenclature. E.g. the Danish, Swedish and German version includes pure Latin, and all headings in the local language. Furthermore, explanatory text is written in local language as well. The English version uses English through out.
- On older existing muscle posters, complete nomenclature is missing and local language versions are rarely seen at all.
