Tibia

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Template:Infobox Bone Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]


The tibia is the larger of the two bones in the leg below the knee in vertebrates.

In humans

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The tibia or shin bone, in human anatomy, is found medial (towards the middle) and anterior (towards the front) to the other such bone, the fibula. It is the second-longest bone in the human body, the largest being the femur. The tibia articulates with the femur and patella superiorly, the fibula laterally and with the ankle inferiorly.

Gender differences

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In the male, its direction is vertical, and parallel with the bone of the opposite side, but in the female it has a slightly oblique direction downward and lateralward, to compensate for the greater obliquity of the femur.

Structure

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It is prismoid in form, expanded above, where it enters into the knee-joint, contracted in the lower third, and again enlarged but to a lesser extent below.

The tibia is connected to the fibula by an interosseous membrane, forming a type of joint called a syndesmoses.

Blood supply

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The tibia derives its arterial blood supply from two sources:[1]

  1. the nutrient artery (main source)
  2. periosteal vessels derived from the anterior tibial artery

Additional images

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See also

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References

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  1. NELSON G, KELLY P, PETERSON L, JANES J. "Blood supply of the human tibia". J Bone Joint Surg Am. 42-A: 625–36. PMID 13854090.

Template:Gray's

Template:Bones of lower extremity

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ca:Tíbia cs:Holenní kost de:Tibia (Wirbeltiere) eo:Tibio it:Tibia (osso) he:שוקה la:Tibia (os) lt:Blauzdikaulis nl:Scheenbeen no:Tibia nn:Tibia sl:Golenica fi:Sääriluu sv:Skenben tl:Lulod uk:Великогомілкова кістка Template:Jb1 Template:WH Template:WikiDoc Sources


Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 | Source: https://www.wikidoc.org/index.php/Tibia
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