Musculoskeletal Anatomy of the Upper Limb

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Musculoskeletal Anatomy of the Upper Limb •



Regions of upper limb: •

Shoulder



Arm – brachium



Forearm – antebrachium



Wrist – carpus



Hand – manus



Digits

Spaces between structures very important for positioning of neurovascular bundles •

Relate surface anatomy and bony landmarks to musculoskeletal structures and so neurovascular anatomy



In upper limb, axilla, cubital fossa and carpal tunnel – axilla contains nerves to upper limb (derived from brachial plexus), arterial supply to limb, veins and lymph vessels and nodes



Bones: •

Shoulder – clavicle, scapula



Arm – humerus



Forearm – radius, ulna



Wrist – eight carpals



Metacarpus (no common term for manus referring to metacarpals) – five metacarpals



Digits – 14 phalanges (three each digit except two in first digit)

JOINTS



Joint occurs where pair of bones contact, usually named after bones involved •

Limb joints need to be mobile so are synovial – cartilage on articulating surfaces, synovial fluid to absorb load and reduce friction, synovial membrane and fibrous capsule



Most joints also contain articular discs/menisci, fat pads, bursae and collateral/accessory ligaments for strength



Basic joint system in upper limb matches basic system in lower limb •

Axial skeleton to girdle – sternoclavicular joint



Between girdle bones – acromioclavicular joint (not particularly mobile)



Girdle to propodial (proximal joint) – glenohumeral joint



Propodial to epipodial (mid-limb joint) – humeroradial joint



Between epipodials – proximal and distal radioulnar joints



Epipodial to autopod (distal joint) – radiocarpal joint (no joint with ulna) !

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Between carpals/tarsals – intercarpal joints



Carpal/tarsal to metacarpal/metatarsal – carpometacarpal joint



Between metacarpals/metatarsals – intermetacarpal joint



Metacarpal/metatarsal to phalanges – metacarpophalangeal joints



Between phalanges – interphalangeal joints

Two types of movement in space: •

Rotation – movement about axis, for synovial joint generally one or two axes of rotation



Translation – sliding along surface, not usually good for synovial joint (causes dislocation)



Categorise joints based on number of axes of rotation or small translation •

Ball and socket – three axes of rotation e.g. glenohumeral joint



Hinge – one axis of rotation, movement at right angles to long axis of articulating bones e.g. humeroradial joint



Pivot – one axis of rotation, movement parallel to long axis of articulating bones e.g. proximal radioulnar joint



Ellipsoid – two axes of rotation, sub-equal range of motion e.g. radiocarpal joint, metacarpophalangeal joints



Saddle – two axes of rotation, approximately equal range e.g. carpometacarpal joint of thumb



Planar – small translations e.g. intercarpal joints

SHOULDER







Bones: •

Girdle – clavicle, scapula



Propodial – humerus

Joints: •

Axis-girdle – sternoclavicular joint



Girdle-girdle – acromioclavicular joint



Girdle-propodial – glenohumeral joint

Muscles •

Axis-girdle – 7 (four posterior and three anterior) and two neck



Girdle-propodial (attached to trunk) – 8 (four prime movers and four rotator cuff)



Girdle-propodial (attached to limb) – five (three ventral and two dorsal)



Bone surface features occur where soft tissue attaches – type of feature doesn’t reveal type of soft tissue !

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Border – edge



Angle – corner



Process – knob, protuberance



Tubercle – small process



Spine – sharp process



Fossa – pit, concavity



Tuberosity – rounded process



Condyle – convex part of joint surface



Cotyle/socket – concave part of joint surface

Clavicle – S-shaped bone with articular surfaces at each end •

Superior surface is smooth, inferior surface has roughened areas for ligament attachments





Medial (sternal) end is triangular, lateral (acromial) end is flatter

Scapula – flat, triangular bone with two prominent processes and spine •

Coracoid process protrudes to clavicle



Acromion is joined to spine of scapula that extends to medial border



Three borders and three angles – one angle forms glenoid fossa/cavity (articular surface)





Three fossae – subscapular, supraspinous and infraspinous

Names of many major features on scapula relate to location e.g. supraspinous fossa

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