Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The theory is that the radial nerve becomes irritated and/or inflamed from friction caused by compression by muscles in the forearm. [1]Some speculate that radial tunnel syndrome is a type of repetitive strain injury (RSI), but there is no detectable pathophysiology and even the existence of this disorder is questioned.
Radial tunnel syndrome; Rage syndrome; Raghib syndrome; Raine syndrome; Ramos-Arroyo syndrome; Ramsay Hunt syndrome type 1; Ramsay Hunt syndrome type 2; Ramsay Hunt syndrome; RAPADILINO syndrome; Rape trauma syndrome; Rapp–Hodgkin syndrome; Rapunzel syndrome; Rasmussen syndrome; RASopathy; Raymond Céstan syndrome; Raynaud syndrome; Red ear ...
Brevis moves the arm from ulnar abduction to its mid-position and flexes dorsally. Longus is a weak pronator in the flexed arm and a supinator in the outstretched arm. At the carpal joints longus acts in dorsiflexion with the extensor carpi ulnaris and in radial abduction with the flexor carpi radialis. These two muscles are called "fist ...
Afrikaans; Alemannisch; العربية; Aragonés; Arpetan; Azərbaycanca; تۆرکجه; বাংলা; Беларуская; Беларуская ...
It is situated between the hand and forearm on the thumb side of the wrist (also called the lateral or radial side). It forms the radial border of the carpal tunnel . The scaphoid bone is the largest bone of the proximal row of wrist bones, its long axis being from above downward, lateralward, and forward.
The oblique cord is a ligament between the ulnar and radius bones in the forearm near the elbow.It takes the form of a small, flattened band, extending distally and laterally, from the lateral side of the ulnar tuberosity at the base of the coronoid process to the radius a little below the radial tuberosity. [1]
97 Avenue Tunnel, Edmonton, under Alberta Legislature Grounds Airport Tunnel , Calgary under Calgary International Airport Edmonton Radial Railway Society Tunnel (Old CPR Rail Tunnel), Edmonton under 109 Street.
Thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS) is a condition in which there is compression of the nerves, arteries, or veins in the superior thoracic aperture, the passageway from the lower neck to the armpit, also known as the thoracic outlet. [1]