Amphiarthrosis: Definition, Types, Examples, and Clinical Importance
Amphiarthrosis refers to slightly movable joints that balance stability with flexibility, allowing limited motion and acting as shock absorbers betwee...
By Hart
Browsing all articles filed under the "Anatomy & Physiology" category.
Amphiarthrosis refers to slightly movable joints that balance stability with flexibility, allowing limited motion and acting as shock absorbers betwee...
By Hart
The knee joint is extensively innervated by branches of the femoral, sciatic, and obturator nerves, which provide essential sensory feedback for propr...
By Alex
The only truly movable joint within the human facial skeleton is the temporomandibular joint (TMJ), which connects the mandible to the temporal bone, ...
By Jordan
Slightly movable joints, also known as amphiarthroses, include the intervertebral joints, pubic symphysis, manubriosternal joint, first sternocostal j...
By Alex
The pivot joint allows movement by enabling a cylindrical bone to rotate around a single longitudinal axis within a stationary bony-ligamentous ring, ...
By Hart
The glenohumeral joint, commonly known as the shoulder joint, is the most mobile joint in the human body due to its ball-and-socket configuration, sha...
By Jordan
Wrist flexion is the movement of bending the hand forward towards the palm, while wrist extension is the movement of bending the hand backward towards...
By Alex
At synovial joints, articular cartilage, a specialized form of hyaline cartilage, serves as the primary structure that prevents bones from directly co...
By Jordan
The two primary ligaments responsible for restricting side-to-side movements (valgus and varus stresses) of the elbow joint are the Ulnar Collateral L...
By Hart