Contents
-SUBJECT INDEX -BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
-ILLUSTRATION INDEX
Henry Gray (1825–1861). Anatomy of the Human Body. 1918.
14. Surface Markings of the Lower Extremity
With the body in the erect posture the line joining the public tubercle to the top of the greater trochanter is practically horizontal; the middle of this line overlies the acetabulum and the head of the femur.
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FIG. 1243– Nélaton’s line and Bryant’s triangle. (See enlarged image)
FIG. 1244– Left gluteal region, showing surface markings for arteries and sciatic nerve. (See enlarged image)
FIG. 1245– Front of right thigh, showing surface markings for bones, femoral artery and femoral nerve. (See enlarged image)
FIG. 1246– Lateral aspect of right leg, showing surface markings for bones, anterior tibial and dorsalis pedis arteries, and deep peroneal nerve. (See enlarged image)
FIG. 1247– Back of left lower extremity, showing surface markings for bones, vessels, and nerves. (See enlarged image)
A line used for clinical purposes is that of Nélaton
(Fig. 1243), which is drawn from the anterior superior iliac spine to the most prominent part of the ischial tuberosity; it crosses the center of the acetabulum and the upper border of the greater trochanter. Another surface marking of clinical importance is
Bryant’s triangle, which is mapped out thus: a line from the anterior superior iliac spine to the top of the greater trochanter forms the base of the triangle; its sides are formed respectively by a horizontal line from the anterior superior iliac spine and a vertical line from the top of the greater trochanter.
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Articulations.—The posterior superior iliac spine overlies the center of the
sacroiliac articulations. 4
The
hip-joint may be indicated, as described above, by the center of a horizontal line from the pubic tubercle to the top of the greater trochanter; or more generally, it is below and slightly lateral to the middle of the inguinal ligament. The
knee-joint is superficial and requires no surface marking. The level of the
ankle-joint is that of a transverse line about 1 cm. above the level of the tip of the medial malleolus. If the foot be forcibly extended, the head of the talus appears as a rounded prominence on the medial side of the dorsum; just in front of this prominence and behind the tuberosity of the navicular is the
talonavicular joint. The
calcaneocuboid joint is situated midway between the lateral malleolus and the prominent base of the fifth metatarsal bone; the line indicating it is parallel to that of the
talonavicular joint. The line of the
fifth tarsometatarsal joint is very oblique; it starts from the projection of the base of the fifth metatarsal bone, and if continued would pass through the head of the first metatarsal. The lines of the
fourth and
third tarsometatarsal joints are less oblique. The
first tarsometatarsal joint corresponds to a groove which can be felt by making firm pressure on the medial border of the foot 2.5 cm. in front of the tuberosity of the navicular bone; the position of the
second tarsometatarsal joint is 1.25 cm. behind this. The
metatarsophalangeal joints are about 2.5 cm. behind the webs of the corresponding toes.
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Muscles.—None of the muscles require any special surface lines to indicate them, but there are three intermuscular spaces which occasionally require definition, viz., the femoral triangle, the adductor canal, and the popliteal fossa.
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The
femoral triangle is bounded above by the inguinal ligament, laterally by the medial border of Sartorius, and medially by the medial border of Adductor longus. In the triangle is the fossa ovalis, through which the great saphenous vein dips to join the femoral; the center of this fossa is about 4 cm. below and lateral to the pubic tubercle, its vertical diameter measures about 4 cm. and its transverse about 1.5 cm. The femoral ring is about 1.25 cm. lateral to the pubic tubercle.
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The
adductor canal occupies the medial part of the middle third of the thigh; it begins at the apex of the femoral triangle and lies deep to the vertical part of Sartorius. The
popliteal fossa is bounded: above and medially by the tendons of Semimembranosus and Semitendinosus; above and laterally by the tendon of Biceps femoris; below and medially by the medial head of Gastrocnemius; below and laterally by the lateral head of Gastrocnemius and the Plantaris.
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Mucous Sheaths.—The positions of the mucous sheaths around the tendons about the ankle-joints are sufficiently indicated in
Figs. 1241, 1242 (see also page 489).
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Arteries.—The points of emergence of the three main arteries on the buttock, viz., the superior and inferior gluteals and the internal pudendal, may be indicated in the following manner
(Fig. 1244). With the femur slightly flexed and rotated inward, a line is drawn from the posterior superior iliac spine to the posterior superior angle of the greater trochanter; the point of emergence of the
superior gluteal artery from the upper part of the greater sciatic foramen corresponds to the junction of the upper and middle thirds of this line. A second line is drawn from the posterior superior iliac spine to the outer part of the ischial tuberosity; the junction of its lower with its middle third marks the point of emergence of the
inferior gluteal and
internal pudendal arteries from the lower part of the greater sciatic foramen. The course of the
femoral artery (Fig. 1245) is represented by the upper two-thirds of a line from a point midway between the anterior superior iliac spine and the symphysis pubis to the adductor tubercle, with the thigh abducted and rotated outward; the
profunda femoris arises from it about 1 to 5 cm. below the inguinal ligament. The course of the upper part of the
popliteal artery (Fig. 1247) is indicated by a line from the lateral margin of Semimembranosus at the junction of the middle and lower thirds of the thigh, obliquely downward to the middle of the popliteal fossa; from this point it runs vertically downward for about 2.5 cm. or to the level of a line through the lower part of the tibial tuberosity. The line indicating the
anterior tibial artery (Fig. 1246) is drawn from the medial side of the head of the fibula to a point midway between the malleoli; the artery begins about 3 cm. below the head of the fibula. The
dorsalis pedis artery is represented on the dorsum of the foot by a line from the center of the interval between the malleoli to the proximal end of the first intermetatarsal space.
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The course of the
posterior tibial artery (Fig. 1247) can be shown by a line from the end of the popliteal artery,
i. e., 2.5 cm. below the center of the popliteal fossa, to midway between the tip of the medial malleolus and the center of the convexity of the heel; its main branch, the
peroneal artery, begins about 7 or 8 cm. below the level of the knee-joint and follows the line of the fibula to the back of the lateral malleolus. The
medial and
lateral plantar arteries begin from the end of the posterior tibial; the medial extends to the middle of the plantar surface of the ball of the great toe, the lateral to within a finger’s breadth of the tuberosity of the fifth metatarsal bone; from this latter point the
plantar arch crosses the foot transversely to the proximal end of the first intermetatarsal space.
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Veins.—The line of the
great saphenous vein is from the front of the medial malleolus to the center of the fossa ovalis; the
small saphenous vein runs from the back of the lateral malleolus to the center of the popliteal fossa.
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Nerves.—The course of the
sciatic nerve (Fig. 1247) can be indicated by a line from a point midway between the outer border of the ischial tuberosity and the posterior superior angle of the greater trochanter to the upper angle of the popliteal fossa. The continuation of this line vertically through the center of the popliteal fossa represents the position of the
tibial nerve, while the
common peroneal nerve follows the line of the tendon of Biceps femoris. The lines for the
deep peroneal nerve and the continuation of the
tibial nerve correspond respectively to those for the anterior and posterior tibial arteries.
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