Obliquus capitis superior muscle

 The obliquus capitis superior muscle (/əˈblkwəs ˈkæpɪtɪs/) is a small muscle in the upper back part of the neck and is one of the suboccipital muscles and part of the suboccipital triangle. It arises from the lateral mass of the atlas bone. It passes superiorly and posteriorly to insert into the lateral half of the inferior nuchal line on the external surface of the occipital bone. The muscle is innervated by the suboccipital nerve, the dorsal ramus of the first spinal nerve.

Obliquus capitis superior muscle
Obliquus capitis superior muscle06.png
Skull seen from behind (obliquus capitis superior shown in red)
Suboccipital triangle dissection - Obliquus capitis superior muscle.png
Obliquus capitis superior (red) and its relationship to other suboccipital muscles.
Details
OriginLateral mass of atlas
InsertionLateral half of the inferior nuchal line
NerveSuboccipital nerve
ActionsExtends head and flex head to the ipsilateral side
Identifiers
LatinMusculus obliquus capitis superior
TA98A04.2.02.006
TA22251
FMA32527
Anatomical terms of muscle
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It acts at the atlanto-occipital joint to extend the head and flex the head to the ipsilateral side.

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
.