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the article seems to be not general enough. E.g. as far as I know in zebrafish the myotome wont loose its metamerical arrangement (see e.g. Kimmel et al, Stages of embryonic development, 1995), but in mammals it will, as the article says.)
I am considering developing this page further as part of an educational assignment in Fall of 2013. If someone else is also working on this, please send me a message and let me know soon, so we don’t duplicate initial efforts in page development.
Quigend (
talk)
22:29, 6 October 2013 (UTC)
This page could use some serious organizing and tightening up of the definition of myotome. Additionally, I think it would be beneficial for the page to clearly lay out how the myotome arises from the dermomyotome and information about the formation of myotomal fibers. It would also be interesting to include information on the role and regulation of myosin expression during myotome formation. Sections should be made for myotome formation in mammals (for which there is information on mice and humans) and non-mammals (for which there is information on zebrafish). Quigend ( talk) 22:53, 6 October 2013 (UTC)
I'm trying to remember some muscle innervations, and am reminded that it was difficult (I'm not sure I ever succeeded) to find a visual representation of the myotome muscle innervations. Is there some technical reason that this is not feasible? Google isn't helping me, I just keep getting dermatome maps (I think that Google's search engine has dermatome and myotome as synonyms). Dermatomes do not correspond to muscle innervations. For example, the biceps brachii is innervated by c5 and c6, but the dermatome that sits on top of the bicep is t1, which is a pretty huge difference. If a myotome map is feasible, I think that it would be a great addition to this page. I don't have the skills for it, but if anyone else does... SCooley138 ( talk) 19:53, 20 October 2013 (UTC)
This is a long-established and substantial article, "Myotome". A recent stub, barely more than a dictionary definition, was created at Myotome (anatomy), and an editor decided there was no "primary topic" for the term "Myotome", and moved this to Myotome (embryology). They did not fix any of the incoming links. I have reverted that move, and added a hatnote to refer readers to the new stub. If someone believes that there is no primary topic for "Myotome", they should do a formal WP:RM to move this page to a disambiguated title, and then create a disambiguation page at the base name and, most importantly, fix all the incoming links to the existing page so that they still point to that page and not the disambiguation page. Pam D 23:33, 19 April 2014 (UTC)
This article refers to two separate topics - one relating to anatomy and the other to embryology. Iztwoz ( talk) 08:23, 20 April 2014 (UTC)
![]() | This article is rated C-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||
|
![]() | It is requested that a photograph be
included in this article to
improve its quality.
The external tool WordPress Openverse may be able to locate suitable images on Flickr and other web sites. |
the article seems to be not general enough. E.g. as far as I know in zebrafish the myotome wont loose its metamerical arrangement (see e.g. Kimmel et al, Stages of embryonic development, 1995), but in mammals it will, as the article says.)
I am considering developing this page further as part of an educational assignment in Fall of 2013. If someone else is also working on this, please send me a message and let me know soon, so we don’t duplicate initial efforts in page development.
Quigend (
talk)
22:29, 6 October 2013 (UTC)
This page could use some serious organizing and tightening up of the definition of myotome. Additionally, I think it would be beneficial for the page to clearly lay out how the myotome arises from the dermomyotome and information about the formation of myotomal fibers. It would also be interesting to include information on the role and regulation of myosin expression during myotome formation. Sections should be made for myotome formation in mammals (for which there is information on mice and humans) and non-mammals (for which there is information on zebrafish). Quigend ( talk) 22:53, 6 October 2013 (UTC)
I'm trying to remember some muscle innervations, and am reminded that it was difficult (I'm not sure I ever succeeded) to find a visual representation of the myotome muscle innervations. Is there some technical reason that this is not feasible? Google isn't helping me, I just keep getting dermatome maps (I think that Google's search engine has dermatome and myotome as synonyms). Dermatomes do not correspond to muscle innervations. For example, the biceps brachii is innervated by c5 and c6, but the dermatome that sits on top of the bicep is t1, which is a pretty huge difference. If a myotome map is feasible, I think that it would be a great addition to this page. I don't have the skills for it, but if anyone else does... SCooley138 ( talk) 19:53, 20 October 2013 (UTC)
This is a long-established and substantial article, "Myotome". A recent stub, barely more than a dictionary definition, was created at Myotome (anatomy), and an editor decided there was no "primary topic" for the term "Myotome", and moved this to Myotome (embryology). They did not fix any of the incoming links. I have reverted that move, and added a hatnote to refer readers to the new stub. If someone believes that there is no primary topic for "Myotome", they should do a formal WP:RM to move this page to a disambiguated title, and then create a disambiguation page at the base name and, most importantly, fix all the incoming links to the existing page so that they still point to that page and not the disambiguation page. Pam D 23:33, 19 April 2014 (UTC)
This article refers to two separate topics - one relating to anatomy and the other to embryology. Iztwoz ( talk) 08:23, 20 April 2014 (UTC)