• Articular surface of the elbow joint which articulates with the trochlear notch of the ulna. Trochlea of humerus. ... Details. Identifiers. Latin. trochlea humeri.
  • In the human arm, the humeral trochlea is the medial portion of the articular surface of the elbow joint which articulates with the trochlear notch on the ulna in the forearm. Structure.
  • Immediately lateral to the trochlea is the capitulum (“small head”), a knob-like structure located on the anterior surface of the distal humerus.
  • Trochlea Humeri, humerusun alt ucunda iç tarafta ulna ile eklem yapan iki çıkıntıya verilen isimdir. Tıpta sıkça kullanılan terimlerden bir tanesidir.
  • Trochlea humeri. Warning: Also non-reviewed material is shown. Click here to see only reviewed content. ... Humeral trochlea. Rol van het opperarmbeen.
  • The trochlea of humerus is the smooth, pulley-shaped projection found on the inferomedial aspect of the condyle of the humerus.
  • Trochlea Humeri terimi, tıp dilinde kullanılan Latince bir kelimedir. Trochlea Humeri nedir? Size kısaca bunun hakkında bilgi verelim.
  • Head of the humerus (caput humeri). And on the margin of the head there is a small groove — the anatomical neck (collum anatomicum). ... trochlea humeri.
  • The humeral trochlea’s articular surface of the medial condyle articulates with the trochlear notch of the ulna. ... trochlea-of-humerus-femur-eye.
  • (5.) Oberstein A, Kreitner KF, Lowe A, Michiels I (1994) Isolated fracture of trochlea humeri following direct elbow trauma.
  • The lower end of the humerus provides the following 7 features: Capitulum, a lateral rounded convex projection. Trochlea, a medial pulley-shaped structure.
  • The medial portion of the articular surface of distal humerus is named the trochlea, and presents a deep depression between two well-marked borders...
  • The structure indicated is the trochlea of the humerus. The distal end of the humerus consists of several features
  • The trochlea has a surface shaped like a pulley and covers the anterior, posterior and inferior surfaces of the medial condyle of the humerus.