Muscle that depresses and abducts eye?

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Multiple Choice

Muscle that depresses and abducts eye?

Explanation:
The muscle that depresses and abducts the eye is the superior oblique. It passes through a pulley called the trochlea, which redirects its tendon so that when the muscle contracts, the eye moves downward (depression) and outward (abduction). It also intorts the eye. Other muscles either pull the eye inward (medial rectus), outward without depressing (lateral rectus), or depress but tend to pull inward (inferior rectus), so only the superior oblique provides both downward and outward movement along with its characteristic intorsion.

The muscle that depresses and abducts the eye is the superior oblique. It passes through a pulley called the trochlea, which redirects its tendon so that when the muscle contracts, the eye moves downward (depression) and outward (abduction). It also intorts the eye. Other muscles either pull the eye inward (medial rectus), outward without depressing (lateral rectus), or depress but tend to pull inward (inferior rectus), so only the superior oblique provides both downward and outward movement along with its characteristic intorsion.

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