Functional Anatomy of the Knee Jointdoi:10.1007/978-981-97-4920-1_16The knee joint consists of tibiofemoral and patellofemoral joints.Oshima, YasushiNippon Medical SchoolSpringer, Singapore
KNEE JOINT ANATOMYPOPLITEUS TENDONFABELLOFIBULAR LIGAMENTPOSTEROLATERAL RESTRAINTSBIOMECHANICSThe major supporting structures of the posterolateral knee were noted to be composed of three components: the fabellofibular ligament, the arcuate ligament, and popliteus muscle with origin from fibular head. We ...
Functional Anatomy of the Ankle Joint :Function of the Ankle Understood from Human Anatomy Junji,Dan - 《Physical Therapy Japan》 被引量: 0发表: 2013年 Anatomy of the Foot and Ankle: Descriptive, Topographic, Functional These activities have been planned and implemented in accordance with the ...
1. Functional anatomy of the patello-femoral joint. Cadaver knee joints were mounted so that life-like forces of weight-bearing were simulated. The patello-femoral contact areas were defined under load throu... JJ Goodfellow,DSD Hungerford,MM Zindel - 《Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British...
Gomphosis example tooth and wall of dental socket Cartilaginous example intervertebral discs Uniaxial joints 1 axis, 1 plane, one degree of freedom and has angular motion Uniaxial joint types hinge joint and pivot joints Hinge joint example humeroulnar knee Pivot joint rotation motion examples-radio...
What is the function of the knee joint? How many fibrous joints are there in the body? What is a joint in anatomy? What is the tissue characteristic of a synarthrosis joint? Which synovial joints are non-axial? What type of synovial joint is the talocrural joint? What are the three ma...
Functional Anatomy of the Knee The purpose of this chapter is to identify the functional anatomy that impacts the reconstruction of the arthritic knee with a prosthetic implant. This work does not attempt to review all the detailed soft-tissue anatomy of the knee that... D.G.Eckhoff,D.G.Eck...
2.The anatomic or functional manifestations of a disease:the pathology of cancer. 3.A departure or deviation from a normal condition:"Neighborhoods plagued by a self-perpetuating pathology of joblessness, welfare dependency, crime"(Time).
1. (Physiology) the ability to move physically: a knee operation has restricted his mobility; mobility is part of physical education. 2. (Sociology) sociol (of individuals or social groups) movement within or between classes and occupations. See also vertical mobility, horizontal mobility 3. (...
The posterior part of biceps femoris and semi-tendinosus act most consistently as flexors, during the early swing phase, but also may function in synergy with hip, knee, and ankle joint extensors near the time of foot placement. Greater variability is found in the activity patterns of ...