Coronal plane

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coronal plane
Human anatomy planes, labeled.svg
The main anatomical planes of the human body, including sagittal or median (red), parasagittal (yellow), frontal or coronal plane (blue) and transverse or axial plane (green)
Details
Identifiers
Latinplana coronalia
TA98A01.2.00.001
TA248
FMA12246
Anatomical terminology

A coronal plane (also known as the frontal plane) is any vertical plane that divides the body into ventral and dorsal (belly and back) sections.

It is one of the three main planes of the body used to describe the location of body parts in relation to each other axis.

Details[]

The coronal plane is an example of a longitudinal plane, because it is perpendicular to the transverse plane. For a human, the mid-coronal plane would transect a standing body into two halves (front and back, or anterior and posterior) in an imaginary line that cuts through both shoulders. The description of the coronal plane applies to most animals as well as humans even though humans walk upright and the various planes are usually shown in the vertical orientation.

The sternal plane (planum sternale) is a coronal plane which transects the front of the sternum.[1]

Etymology[]

The term is derived from Latin corona ('garland, crown'), from Ancient Greek κορώνη (korōnē, 'garland, wreath'). The coronal plane is so-called because it lies in the direction of Coronal suture.

Additional images[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Definition: sternal plane from Online Medical Dictionary". Retrieved 2007-12-17.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""