Examples of fibula in the following topics:
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- The tibia and the smaller fibula bones comprise the lower leg and articulate at the knee and ankle.
- The tibia and fibula are the two bones of
the lower leg.
- The tibia is located medially to the fibula and is much larger.
- Laterally, there is the fibular notch that articulates with the fibula.
- Proximally, the fibula head articulates with
the lateral condyle of the tibia, and the biceps femoris attaches to the fibula
head.
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- The patella (knee cap) is the bone between the fibula and femur.
- The patella or knee cap is the bone between the fibula and femur.
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- In the leg, the interosseous membrane extends
between the tibia
and the fibula,
running along the crests of the bones.
- Joints of this kind are found at several points in the human body, including the intermediate radioulnar joint, where the radius and ulna meet above the wrist, in the spine between the spinous processes of various adjacent vertebra, and above the ankle joint where the tibia and fibula converge.
- The anterior inferior tibiofibular ligament crosses in front of the tibia and fibula bones.
- Players of rough sports such as football or rugby have an increased risk of fracturing their fibulas and tearing the interosseous ligament between it and the tibia.
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- The ankle or talocrural joint is formed from the tibia and fibula of
the lower leg and talus of the foot.
- Attachments - Originates from the fibula
and attaches to the big toe.
- Attachments - Originates from the tibia and
fibula and attaches to the plantar surfaces of the toes.
- Attachments – Originates from the fibula
and tibia.
- Attachments – Originates from the lateral
surface of the fibula and attaches to the little toe.
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- The bones of the lower limb are the femur (thigh bone), patella (kneecap), tibia and fibula (bones of the leg), tarsals (bones of the ankle), and metatarsals and phalanges (bones of the foot) .
- The tibia articulates with the femur at its proximal end, with the fibula and the tarsal bones at its distal end.
- The fibula, or calf bone, parallels and articulates with the tibia.
- The tarsals are the seven bones of the ankle, which transmits the weight of the body from the tibia and the fibula to the foot.
- The lower limb consists of the thigh (femur), kneecap (patella), leg (tibia and fibula), ankle (tarsals), and foot (metatarsals and phalanges) bones.
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- Femur
(2) (thigh), patella
(2) (knee), tibia
(2) and fibula
(2) (leg)
- These consist of the femur, patella, tibia, fibula, tarsal
bones, metatarsal bones, and phalanges.
- The tibia
is located on the medial side of the leg, and the fibula
is the thin bone of
the lateral leg.
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- Thigh and leg (eight bones) - The thigh and leg consist of the femur (two bones that comprise the thighs), Tibia (two bones), Patella (two bones that are the knees), and Fibula (two bones).
- The femur, tibia, patella, and fibula are all a part of the appendicular skeleton.
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- The proximal row contains the
talus, which is the most superior of the tarsals and articulates with the tibia
and fibula to form the ankle joint.
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- In the leg, the interosseous membrane extends between the tibia and the fibula, running along the crests of the bones.
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- An example of a syndesmosis is the joint of the tibia and fibula in the ankle.