Bone: Lateral border of the scapula | | Left scapula. Dorsal surface. (Axillary border labeled at bottom left.} | Latin | margo lateralis scapulae | Gray's | subject #50 205 | Dorlands/Elsevier | m_04/12514658 | The lateral border (or axillary border, or margin) is the thickest of the three borders of the scapula. Image File history File links Download high resolution version (591x850, 63 KB) File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ...
Latin is an ancient Indo-European language originally spoken in Latium, the region immediately surrounding Rome. ...
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Left scapula - front view () Left scapula - rear view () In anatomy, the scapula, or shoulder blade, is the bone that connects the humerus (arm bone) with the clavicle (collar bone). ...
It begins above at the lower margin of the glenoid cavity, and inclines obliquely downward and backward to the inferior angle. Glenoid fossa redirects here, for the other use of Glenoid fossa please see mandibular fossa. ...
Immediately below the glenoid cavity is a rough impression, the infraglenoid tuberosity, about 2.5 cm. in length, which gives origin to the long head of the Triceps brachii; in front of this is a longitudinal groove, which extends as far as the lower third of this border, and affords origin to part of the Subscapularis. Triceps brachii The triceps brachii muscle is a large three-headed skeletal muscle found in humans. ...
The Subscapularis muscle is a muscle of the human body. ...
The inferior third is thin and sharp, and serves for the attachment of a few fibers of the Teres major behind, and of the Subscapularis in front. Teres major is a muscle of the upper limb and one of six scapulohumeral muscles. ...
The Subscapularis muscle is a muscle of the human body. ...
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Dartmouth College is a private academic institution in Hanover, New Hampshire, in the United States. ...
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An illustration from the 1918 edition Henry Grays Anatomy of the Human Body, commonly known as Grays Anatomy after Henry Gray, is an anatomy textbook widely regarded as a classic work on human anatomy. ...
pectoral girdle, clavicle: conoid tubercle - trapezoid line - costal tuberosity - subclavian groove Grays Anatomy illustration of a human femur. ...
In humans, the upper limb is an anatomical term for the limb that is attached to the pectoral girdle. ...
The pectoral girdle is the set of bones which connect the upper limb to the axial skeleton on each side. ...
Collarbone and collar bone redirect here. ...
At the posterior border of the scapula, near the point where the prismatic joins with the flattened portion, is a rough eminence, the conoid tubercle (or coracoid tuberosity); this, in the natural position of the bone, surmounts the coracoid process of the scapula, and gives attachment to the conoid ligament. ...
On the medial part of the clavicle is a broad rough surface, the costal tuberosity (impression for costoclavicular ligament), rather more than 2 cm. ...
scapula: spine of scapula - suprascapular notch - acromion - glenoid cavity - glenoidal labrum - coracoid process fossae (subscapular, supraspinatous, infraspinatous) borders (superior, lateral/axillary, medial/vertebral) angles (superior, inferior, lateral) tubercles (infraglenoid, supraglenoid) Left scapula - front view () Left scapula - rear view () In anatomy, the scapula, or shoulder blade, is the bone that connects the humerus (arm bone) with the clavicle (collar bone). ...
The acromion process, or simply the acromion, is an anatomical feature on the scapula. ...
Glenoid fossa redirects here, for the other use of Glenoid fossa please see mandibular fossa. ...
The glenoidal labrum (glenoid ligament) is a fibrocartilaginous rim attached around the margin of the glenoid cavity. ...
In human beings, the coracoid process is a small hook-like structure that comes off the scapula to point forward. ...
Left scapula - front view () Left scapula - rear view () In anatomy, the scapula, or shoulder blade, is the bone that connects the humerus (arm bone) with the clavicle (collar bone). ...
The supraspinatous fossa (supraspinatus fossa, supraspinous fossa) of the scapula, smaller than the infraspinatous fossa, is concave, smooth, and broader at its vertebral than at its humeral end; its medial two-thirds give origin to the Supraspinatus. ...
The infraspinatous fossa (infraspinatus fossa, infraspinous fossa) of the scapula is much larger than the supraspinatous fossa; toward its vertebral margin a shallow concavity is seen at its upper part; its center presents a prominent convexity, while near the axillary border is a deep groove which runs from the upper...
The inferior angle of the scapula, thick and rough, is formed by the union of the vertebral and axillary borders; its dorsal surface affords attachment to the Teres major and frequently to a few fibers of the Latissimus dorsi. ...
The lateral angle of the scapula (head of the scapula, acromial angle) is the thickest part of the bone. ...
The infraglenoid tubercle is the part of the scapula to which the long head of the triceps brachii attaches. ...
The supraglenoid tubercle is a region of the scapula to which the long head of the biceps brachii muscle attaches. ...
humerus: upper extremity - necks (anatomical, surgical) - tubercles (greater, lesser) - intertubercular groove body - radial sulcus - deltoid tuberosity lower extremity - capitulum - trochlea - epicondyles (lateral, medial) - supracondylar ridges (lateral, medial) - fossae (radial, coronoid, olecranon) The humerus is a long bone in the arm or fore-legs (animals) that runs from the shoulder to the elbow. ...
The anatomical neck of the humerus is obliquely directed, forming an obtuse angle with the body. ...
The greater tubercle is situated lateral to the head and lesser tubercle. ...
The lesser tubercle, although smaller, is more prominent than the greater tubercle: it is situated in front, and is directed medialward and forward. ...
The tubercles of the humerus are separated from each other by a deep groove, the intertubercular groove (bicipital groove, sulcus intertubercular), which lodges the long tendon of the Biceps brachii and transmits a branch of the anterior humeral circumflex artery to the shoulder-joint. ...
The body or shaft of the humerus is almost cylindrical in the upper half of its extent, prismatic and flattened below, and has three borders and three surfaces. ...
The deltoid tuberosity is the region on the shaft of the humerus to which the the deltoid muscle attaches. ...
The lateral portion of the articular surface of the humerus consists of a smooth, rounded eminence, named the capitulum of the humerus; it articulates with the cupshaped depression on the head of the radius, and is limited to the front and lower part of the bone. ...
The medial portion of the articular surface of the humerus is named the trochlea, and presents a deep depression between two well-marked borders; it is convex from before backward, concave from side to side, and occupies the anterior, lower, and posterior parts of the extremity. ...
Above the front part of the trochlea is a small depression, the coronoid fossa, which receives the coronoid process of the ulna during flexion of the forearm. ...
ulna: upper extremity (olecranon, coronoid process, tuberosity, radial notch, semilunar notch) - body of ulna - lower extremity (styloid process) The ulna (Elbow Bone) [Figs. ...
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The coronoid process is a triangular eminence projecting forward from the upper and front part of the ulna. ...
The semilunar notch of the ulna (trochlear notch of ulna, greater sigmoid cavity) is a large depression, formed by the olecranon and the coronoid process, and serving for articulation with the trochlea of the humerus. ...
The body of the ulna at its upper part is prismatic in form, and curved so as to be convex behind and lateralward; its central part is straight; its lower part is rounded, smooth, and bent a little lateralward. ...
radius: upper extremity (tuberosity) - body - lower extremity (ulnar notch, styloid process) The radius and ulna of the left forearm, posterior surface. ...
The body of the radius (or shaft of radius) is prismoid in form, narrower above than below, and slightly curved, so as to be convex lateralward. ...
carpus: scaphoid - lunate - triquetral - pisiform - trapezium - trapezoid - capitate - hamate (hamulus) In Greek mythology, Carpus fruit was a son of Chloris and Boreas. ...
The scaphoid bone of the wrist is found on the thumb side of the hand, within the anatomical snuffbox. ...
The lunate bone (os lunatum; semilunar bone) is a bone in the human hand that may be distinguished by its deep concavity and crescentic outline. ...
The triquetral bone (also called triquetral, os triquetrum, cuneiform bone, pyramidal bone, cubital bone, os pyramidale, os triangulare, three-cornered bone, and triangular bone) is a type of carpal bone. ...
The left pisiform bone. ...
The trapezium is a bone in the human hand. ...
In human anatomy, the trapezoid bone (lesser multangular bone; os multangulum minus) is a bone in the hands. ...
The capitate bone (os capitatum; os magnum) is a bone in the human hand. ...
The hamate bone (os hamatum; unciform bone) is a bone in the human hand that may be readily distinguished by its wedge-shaped form, and the hook-like process which projects from its volar surface. ...
The volar surface of the hamate bone presents, at its lower and ulnar side, a curved, hook-like process, the hamulus, directed forward and lateralward. ...
metacarpus: 1st metacarpal - 2nd - 3rd - 4th - 5th The metacarpus is the intermediate part of the hand skeleton that is located between the fingers distally and the carpus which forms the connection to the forearm. ...
The first metacarpal bone (metacarpal bone of the thumb) which connects to the thumb is shorter and stouter than the others, diverges to a greater degree from the carpus, and its volar surface is directed toward the palm. ...
The fourth metacarpal bone (metacarpal bone of the ring finger) is shorter and smaller than the third. ...
The fifth metacarpal bone (metacarpal bone of the little finger) presents on its base one facet on its superior surface, which is concavo-convex and articulates with the hamate, and one on its radial side, which articulates with the fourth metacarpal. ...
phalanges of the hand The Phalanges of the hand are fourteen in number, three for each finger, and two for the thumb. ...
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