Gracilis muscle is a long and slender muscle situated in the medial thigh. Along with the adductor longus, adductor brevis, adductor magnus and pectineus muscles, they make up the thigh adductors group.
The slender/thin muscle.
Gracilis is the most superficially situated hip adductors and covers the other four in this group. It is also the weakest adductor in the group but also the only one to act on both the hip and knee joints. The Gracilis also has an important role in trunk balance when walking.
Anterior body of pubis, inferior pubic ramus, ischial ramus.
Medial surface of proximal tibia (via pes anserinus).
Hip joint: Thigh flexion, thigh adduction.
Knee joint: leg flexion, leg internal rotation.
Obturator nerve (L2-L3).
Deep femoral artery (via artery to the adductors).
The gracilis can be used a muscle flap for facial reanimation/facial palsy and has the potential for producing periorbital-wrinkling characteristic of a Duchenne smile.
Boahene, K. O., Owusu, J., Ishii, L., Ishii, M., Desai, S., Kim, I., Kim, L., & Byrne, P. (2018). The Multivector Gracilis Free Functional Muscle Flap for Facial Reanimation. JAMA facial plastic surgery, 20(4), 300–306.
Standing with your feet together, take a wide step to the side and bend your knee. Your leg that stayed behind should remain straight whilst the other is bent.
Sitting on the floor, bend both knees and drop the knees outwards, creating a stretch on the inside of the legs. Using both hands to push down the knees increases the stretch.
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