Part 6: Posterior Compartment of Arm Flashcards
Origins of heads of Triceps
Long head: Infraglenoid tubercle of scapula
Lat head: Upper half posterior humerus (surgical neck to deltoid insertion)
Med head: Lower half posterior humerus (medial radial groove and both IM speta)
Triceps insertion, action and innervation
I: Post upper surface olecranon process and post capsule
A: Elbow extension, shoulder stabilisation, retracts capsule elb jnt
N: Radial n (C6,7,8) post cord
Describe path of Radial N
Continuation of post cord. Leaves axilla via triangular space and spirals down behind humerus behind uppermost fibres of triceps.
Pierces lat IM septum to enter ant compartment in cubital fossa.
What are the 4 branches of radial nerve to triceps?
1 to long head
1 to lateral head
2 to medial head
Sensory branches of radial nerve in arm
Posterior cutaneous of arm
lower lateral cutaneous nerve of arm
Describe profunda brachii course and branches
Enters arm via triangular space. At lat IM septum divides into anterior and post branches running down. Ant pierces septum to run anteriorly to join cubital anastomosis
Ulnar nerve path
Enters posterior compartment in lower arm and then passes through humeral and ulna heads in forearm
Describe elbow joint
Synovial hinge joint.
2 articulations - humeral radius and humeral-ulnar
Describe humeral-radial articulation
Hinge joint
Sphere like capitalum articulates with radial head
Describe humeral-ulnar articulation
Hinge joint
Trochlear is grooved surface which articulates with curved ridge of ulnar
This creates carry angle
Ligaments of elbow joint
Ulnar collateral: Anterior (strongest, med epcndl to med coronoid), posterior (med olecranon to med coronoid) and middle band (med epcndl to med olecranon) form triangle
Radial collateral: single flat ligament from humerus (below CEO) to annular lig
Annular lig:
radial notch ulnar and slings around head and neck of radius
Capsule:
Surrounds joint - attaches to annular lig not to radius
Nerves supply of elbow
Mscn, median, ulnar and radial nerves (Hilton’s law)
Movements
flexion and extension