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Neck Muscles | Suprahyoid & Infrahyoid Anatomy
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Description
What It Is:
A labeled anatomy diagram of the neck highlighting the suprahyoid muscles (geniohyoid, digastric, mylohyoid, stylohyoid) and infrahyoid muscles (thyrohyoid, omohyoid, sternohyoid, sternothyroid). Additional structures such as the mandible, hyoid bone, thyroid cartilage, trachea, and clavicles are also indicated.
Why Use It:
This diagram helps learners understand the muscles responsible for swallowing, speech, and neck stabilization, essential in anatomy, medical, and speech therapy education.
How to Use It:
• Label muscles in anatomy or physiology class.
• Use for studying swallowing mechanics and clinical neck anatomy.
• Reference for medical students, speech-language pathologists, and ENT specialists.
Grade Suitability:
Best suited for advanced high school anatomy, undergraduate pre-med, and healthcare programs.
• High school biology and anatomy courses
• Medical, nursing, and speech therapy students
Target Users:
Students, medical trainees, biology teachers, speech-language pathologists, ENT specialists, and physiotherapists.
A labeled anatomy diagram of the neck highlighting the suprahyoid muscles (geniohyoid, digastric, mylohyoid, stylohyoid) and infrahyoid muscles (thyrohyoid, omohyoid, sternohyoid, sternothyroid). Additional structures such as the mandible, hyoid bone, thyroid cartilage, trachea, and clavicles are also indicated.
Why Use It:
This diagram helps learners understand the muscles responsible for swallowing, speech, and neck stabilization, essential in anatomy, medical, and speech therapy education.
How to Use It:
• Label muscles in anatomy or physiology class.
• Use for studying swallowing mechanics and clinical neck anatomy.
• Reference for medical students, speech-language pathologists, and ENT specialists.
Grade Suitability:
Best suited for advanced high school anatomy, undergraduate pre-med, and healthcare programs.
• High school biology and anatomy courses
• Medical, nursing, and speech therapy students
Target Users:
Students, medical trainees, biology teachers, speech-language pathologists, ENT specialists, and physiotherapists.




