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"But it's hard to play if he can't pronate his wrist."
And his feet pronate when he runs.
It is true, I do pronate less.
When the pitcher lets go, he must pronate his wrist, or turn it so the palm faces third base.
In a supinated position, it tends to pronate as it flexes.
Analysis of forelimb function indicates that even though they couldn't pronate their hands, they could also walk on four legs.
The term high-arched foot is often used as a synonym for feet that do not pronate enough during the heel-strike phase of walking.
During the gait cycle the foot can pronate in many different ways based on rearfoot and forefoot function.
For example, if you pronate (land on the outside of your heel and turn your foot inward), consider anti-pronation footwear.
In the early part of the walking cycle, when the heel strikes the ground, it is desirable to pronate, or roll in, to help dampen shock.
Back went the club slowly, his body coiling, down again through his left side, inside out, and pronate the wrists on contact and follow through.
People who pronate (feet roll inward at the arches), have flat feet, or aren't flexible have a higher risk for achy knees.
Alternating movements: Patient is told e.g. to pronate and supinate his hands in rapid succession, holding forearms vertically.
Pronator quadratus is a square shaped muscle on the distal forearm that acts to pronate (turn so the palm faces downwards) the hand.
It is common even for people who pronate normally to have some angle between the foot and the ankle, but not to the extent seen in those who overpronate.
My almost completely flat arches mean that I "pronate" when I run (or walk for that matter), which means my ankle collapses inwards just after impact.
The Pronator teres test is an indication of the syndrome-the patient reports pain when attempting to pronate the forearm against resistance while extending the elbow simultaneously.
The study also ruled out the possibility of "knuckle-walking" and other forms of locomotion that would make a effective locomotion possible without the need to pronate the hand.
After conducting a study at the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, Maggie Boozer suggests that people with higher arches tend to pronate to a greater degree.
This inability to pronate the hand is also supported by in-situ finds of articulated (still-connected) arms that always show unrotated hands with palmar faces facing each other.
For example, runners whose feet pronate - that is, the arch falls inward with each step, which slightly twists a bone in the lower leg - are at increased risk of shin splints and stress fractures.
Theropods, including spinosaurids, could not pronate their hands (rotate the forearm so the palm faced the ground), but a resting position on the side of the hand was possible, as shown by fossil prints from an Early Jurassic theropod.
Most notably, theropods and other bipedal saurischian dinosaurs (including the bipedal prosauropods) could not pronate their hands-that is, they could not rotate the forearm so that the palms faced the ground or backwards towards the legs.
The pronator teres is a muscle of the human body (located mainly in the forearm) that, along with the pronator quadratus muscle, serves to pronate the forearm (turning it so that the palm faces posteriorly when the body is in the anatomical position).