Lower Extremity of Radius - Additional Images

Additional Images

  • Ligaments of wrist. Anterior view.

  • Ligaments of wrist. Posterior view.

  • Vertical section through the articulations at the wrist, showing the synovial cavities.

  • Transverse section across distal ends of radius and ulna.

  • X-Ray of a closed fracture of the distal radius with 10° of lateral angulation, subject is the left arm of 11-year-old male

This article incorporates text from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy.

Bones of upper limbs (TA A02.4, GA 2.200–230)
Pectoral girdle, clavicle
  • conoid tubercle
  • trapezoid line
  • costal tuberosity
  • subclavian groove
Scapula
  • fossae (subscapular, supraspinatous, infraspinatous)
  • scapular notch
  • glenoid cavity
  • tubercles (infraglenoid, supraglenoid)
  • spine of scapula
  • acromion
  • coracoid process
  • borders (superior, lateral/axillary, medial/vertebral)
  • angles (superior, inferior, lateral)
Humerus
  • upper extremity: necks (anatomical, surgical)
  • tubercles (greater, lesser)
  • intertubercular sulcus
  • body: radial sulcus
  • deltoid tuberosity
  • lower extremity: capitulum
  • trochlea
  • epicondyles (lateral, medial)
  • supracondylar ridges (lateral, medial)
  • fossae (radial, coronoid, olecranon)
Forearm
  • radius: upper extremity (head, tuberosity)
  • body
  • lower extremity (ulnar notch, styloid process)
  • ulna: upper extremity (tuberosity, olecranon, coronoid process, radial notch, trochlear notch)
  • body
  • lower extremity (head, styloid process)
Hand
  • carpus: scaphoid
  • lunate
  • triquetral
  • pisiform
  • trapezium
  • trapezoid
  • capitate
  • hamate (hamulus)
  • metacarpus: 1st metacarpal
  • 2nd
  • 3rd
  • 4th
  • 5th
  • phalanges of the hand: proximal
  • intermediate
  • distal

M: BON/CAR

anat (c/f/k/f, u, t/p, l)/phys/devp/cell

noco/cong/tumr, sysi/epon, injr

proc, drug (M5)


Read more about this topic:  Lower Extremity Of Radius

Famous quotes containing the words additional and/or images:

    Dog. A kind of additional or subsidiary Deity designed to catch the overflow and surplus of the world’s worship.
    Ambrose Bierce (1842–1914)

    Language, the machine of the poet, is best fitted for his purpose in its rudest state. Nations, like individuals, first perceive, and then abstract. They advance from particular images to general terms. Hence the vocabulary of an enlightened society is philosophical, that of a half-civilised people is poetical.
    Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800–1859)