English: Identifier: landmarkssurface00rawl (find matches)
Title: Landmarks and surface markings of the human body
Year: 1913 (1910s)
Authors: Rawling, L. Bathe (Louis Bathe)
Subjects: Human anatomy
Publisher: New York, P. B. Hoeber
Contributing Library: Columbia University Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: Open Knowledge Commons
View Book Page: Book Viewer
About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Images: All Images From Book
Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.
Text Appearing Before Image:
riG. XXIII. To /ace /. 74. FIG. XXIV. 1. The anterior superior iliac spine. 2. The pubic spines. 3. The sartorius muscle. 4. The adductor longus muscle, 5. The anterior crural nerve. 6. The common femoral artery. 7. The common femoral vein. 8. The femoral ring. 9. The saphenous opening. 10. 10, 10. The internal or long saphenous vein. 11. The profunda femoris artery. 12. The superficial femoral in Scarpas triangle. 13. The superficial femoral in Hunters canal. 14. The adductor magnus tendon. 15. The adductor tubercle. 16. The lower epiphysial line of the femtir. 17. The line of the knee-joint. 18. The gracilis, sartorius, and semitendinosus muscles. 19. The internal saphenous nerve. 20. The posterior tibial artery. 21. The internal plantar artery. 22. The external plantar artery. 23. The anterior tibial nerve. THE SIDE OF THE THIGH AND LEG
Text Appearing After Image:
IIG. XXIV. To follow Fig. XXI11 THE LOWER EXTREMITY 75 the biceps tendon there is a depression which is bounded anteriorly by the broad iHo-tibial band. TwoFig. XXIII., 7. well-marked tendons bound the popliteal spaceon the upper and inner side, the semimembranosus andsemitendinosus. The latter is the more external, theFig. xxi., more superficial, and the narrower, and the ^ ^- long rounded tendon can be traced somedistance up into the thigh. The semimembranosustendon lies to the inner side of the semitendinosus andon a deeper plane. The broad tendon can be traceddownwards to its insertion into the inner and posterioraspect of the internal tuberosity of the tibia. On theinner aspect of the knee the tendon of the gracilis muscleand the lower part of the sartorius muscle form a fairlywell-marked prominence, the individual muscles being,however, usually incapable of clear definition owing totheir flattened shape. Between these tendons and theprominent vastus internus muscle a depression
Note About Images
Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.