Abduction is an anatomical term describing movement of a limb or other body part, and it specifically describes movement away from the midline or the median plane. When the fingers of your opened hand spread outward, they move away from the neutrally positioned 3rd digit, this is abduction of the fingers. When you bring your arm up laterally from you side within the coronal or frontal plane, you are abducting your shoulder. The same goes for bringing your leg out laterally within the coronal plane.
Bending your trunk or head laterally within the coronal plane away from the midline is not termed abduction. In this case you are performing lateral flexion or lateral bending.
The opposite of abduction is adduction, which means to move a limb or other part of the body toward the midline.
Abduction is movement away from the midline of the body.
That is the medical term.
A movement toward the midline is called adduction. Adduct means to bring towards the center. The opposite, "abduction" is moving away from midline.
Ectopic is the medical term meaning away from normal location.
The medical term for movement towards the middle is "adduction." This term describes the action of bringing a body part closer to the midline of the body.
adduction
extension
Akinesia is the term neurologists and other medical professionals use for absence of movement. Two related terms often used in conjunction with akinesia are bradykinesia(slowed movement) and hypokinesia (reduced movement).
The medical term for "away from an organ" is "distal." It refers to a structure that is farther away from a point of reference on the body.
Bradykinesia is the medical term meaning slow movement. Bradykinesia may be seen in Parkinson's disease or depression.
"Ambulation" Kineso, kinesio, kinesia, kinesis, kinetic all stand for movement as a combining form or suffix in medical term.
Peristalsis