Appendicular Skeleton: Lower Limb Flashcards
Lower Limb
Carries entire weight of body
Bones are thicker and stronger than the upper limbs
Femur (thigh bone) is the largest and strongest bone in the body
Femur
Head of femur is carried on a neck that angles laterally to join shaft
Neck is weakest part of femur
Greater and Lesser trochanters are sites of muscle attachment.
Lateral and medial condyles articulate w/ tibia.
Lateral and medial epicondyles are the more raised parts of these condyles
The ridge along the posterior shaft (diaphysis) of the bone is the linea aspera. Used for muscle attachment
Condyles are separated anteriorly by a patellar surface
Condyles are separated posteriorly by intercondylar fossa
Patella
Sesamoid bone (formed w/ CT) Enclosed in tendon of quadriceps muscle Protects knee joint and improves leverage of quadriceps muscles
Tibia and Fibula
Tibia is larger and more sturdy. Located medially in leg
Fibula is thinner than tibia. Located laterally in leg.
Superior and inferior articulations, also connected by interosseous membrane
Tibia articulates w/ femur (at knee) and talus (at ankle)
Fibula does NOT articulate w/ femur at knee and is only for stabilization at ankle
Tibia
Receives weight of body and transmits it to foot
Medial and lateral condyles articulate w/ condyles of femur
Diaphysis/shaft of tibia is triangular w/ a sharp anterior border (shin)
Distal end is flattened for articulation w/ talus; medial malleolus projects to form ankle bone
Fibula
Thin
Head on superior end, lateral malleolus is on inferior end (ankle bone)
DOES NOT BEAR WEIGHT
Ankle Fractures
Common: sports, skiing, running
Typically result of rolling or twisting
Ligaments crossing the joint are often so strong that they remain intact but the bones fracture
Foot
Fxn: support weight of body, acts as lever for moving the body (walking/running)
Skeleton of foot includes tarsals, metatarsals, and phalanges
Tarsals
7 bones
Body weight mostly carried by talus and calcaneus
Talus articulates w/ tibia and fibula anteriorly and calcaneus inferiorly
Calcaneus is the heel
Achilles tendon attaches to posterior surface and enables extension (plantar flexion) of foot
Foot: Metatarsals and Phalanges
Metatarsus=5 small digits; numbered I-V
1st metatarsal at base of big toe (Hallux) is largest, helps support weight of body
There are 3 phalanges for each digit (digits II-V), ordered proximal, medial, and distal
Hallux has no middle phalanx
Arches of the Foot
The bones of the foot form 3 arches:
- -transverse (side to side between longitudinal arches)
- -medial longitudinal (talus is key)
- -lateral longitudinal (cuboid is key)
This supports and distributes body weight so that about half goes to heel, half to metatarsals
Bones, ligaments, tendons all work together to maintain these
Overtime, tendons can begin to fail (under or overuse). This leads to “fallen arches”
Disorders of the Foot
Plantar Fasciitis: very painful, results from inflamm/tiny tears to ligament. Pain at heel/bottom of foot
Common injury, typically overuse/standing a lot (ex: teachers)
Name the 7 tarsal bones
Talus Calcaneus Cuboid Navicular 3 Cuneiforms
How many bones are in the lower limb?
30 (30/leg)
Femur Patella Tibia Fibula 26 bones in foot (tarsals, metatarsals, phalanges)