Two-headed muscle

Musculus biceps

  • Related terms: Twoheaded muscle

Definition

Muhammad A. Javaid

A two-headed muscle is a type of skeletal muscle that has two distinct heads of origin, each arising from a different anatomical site. These heads typically merge into a single muscle belly before inserting onto a common tendon. The dual origins allow the muscle to cross multiple joints or perform combined actions, depending on which head is active.

Examples
  • Biceps brachii (arm) — long and short heads flex the elbow and supinate the forearm.

  • Biceps femoris (posterior thigh) — long and short heads extend the hip and flex the knee.

  • Gastrocnemius (calf) — medial and lateral heads contribute to plantar flexion of the foot.

Note

It is important to distinguish between “two-headed” and “two-bellied” muscles, which are related but anatomically distinct terms.

Feature

Two-headed muscle

Two-bellied muscle

Definition

A skeletal muscle with two separate heads (origins) that merge into a single muscle belly before inserting on a common tendon.

A skeletal muscle with two distinct muscle bellies, connected by an intermediate tendon.

Number of origins

Two separate origins (hence “two-headed”).

Usually a single origin shared by both bellies.

Direction of pull

Fibres usually pull in one direction, producing a unified movement.

The line of pull may change due to the intermediate tendon or pulley mechanism.

Examples

Biceps brachii (arm), biceps femoris (thigh), gastrocnemius (leg).

Digastric (neck), omohyoid (neck).

Tendon structure

Single terminal tendon of insertion.

Intermediate tendon connecting two bellies.

References

  • Gray, H. (2016) Gray’s anatomy the anatomical basis of clinical practice. 41st edition. Edited by S. Standring. New York: Elsevier.