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  2. Obturator for Tracheostomy: How It's Used During Placement -...

    www.healthline.com/health/obturator-tracheostomy

    Doctors use an obturator during a tracheostomy to ensure the trach tube is correctly inserted and positioned in the airway. It also helps protect nearby tissues.

  3. Obturator Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

    www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/obturator

    The meaning of OBTURATOR is something (such as a prosthetic device) that closes or blocks up an opening (such as a fissure in the palate).

  4. Obturator internus: Attachments, innervation and action - Kenhub

    www.kenhub.com/en/library/anatomy/obturator-internus-muscle

    Obturator internus is a bilateral triangular-shaped muscle situated deep within both the pelvic and gluteal regions. This muscle is primarily considered a muscle of the lower limb.

  5. Anatomy, Abdomen and Pelvis, Obturator Muscles

    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK589636

    The obturator externus and internus are bilateral-triangular shaped muscles originating in the pelvis and inserting onto the greater trochanter of the femur. The obturator muscles work synergistically with surrounding muscles to provide hip mobility. Their primary function is external rotation of the hip.

  6. Obturator Nerve: Anatomy, Functions, and Conditions - WebMD

    www.webmd.com/brain/obturator-nerve-what-to-know

    The obturator nerve is a large, multibranched nerve that travels through your pelvis to your inner thigh. This nerve helps you feel sensations like temperature and pain in your lower limbs.

  7. Obturator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obturator

    Botany. Part of the ovary of a flower that chemically guides the pollen tube to the micropyle. Engineering. Obturator ring, a part in early aircraft engines. Obturating ring, used particularly in artillery to form a seal when pressure is applied. Category: Disambiguation pages.

  8. Obturator nerve: origin, course and function - Kenhub

    www.kenhub.com/en/library/anatomy/obturator-nerve

    The obturator nerve is one of the largest branches of the lumbar plexus. It is a mixed nerve which arises from the ventral (anterior) rami of the spinal nerves L2-L4. The function of the obturator nerve is to provide motor innervation to all the medial muscles of the thigh (hip adductors) except for the ischiocondylar (hamstring) part of the ...

  9. Obturator Nerve: Anatomy & Function - Cleveland Clinic

    my.clevelandclinic.org/health/body/22348-obturator

    This nerve provides motor (muscle movement) and sensory (sensation) to your inner thigh. For motor functions, muscles along your obturator nerve help you: Extend your leg at your knee. Flex at your hip. Maintain balance while standing and walking.

  10. Obturator nerve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obturator_nerve

    The obturator nerve is responsible for the sensory innervation of the skin of the medial aspect of the thigh. The nerve is also responsible for the motor innervation of the adductor muscles of the lower limb (external obturator, [4] adductor longus, adductor brevis, adductor magnus, gracilis) and the pectineus (inconstant).

  11. Anatomy, Abdomen and Pelvis, Obturator Nerve

    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK551640

    The obturator nerve arises from the lumbar plexus and provides sensory and motor innervation to the thigh. This nerve provides motor innervation to the medial compartment of the thigh and as a result, is essential to the adduction of the thigh.