Navicular: Difference between revisions

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'''Original Editor''' - [[User:User Name|User Name]]
'''Original Editor''' - [[User:User Name|Alex Benham]]


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'''Top Contributors''' - {{Special:Contributors/{{FULLPAGENAME}}}}  
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== Description  ==
== Description  ==
The Navicular bone is one of the seven tarsal bones of the [[Ankle and Foot]].  
The navicular bone is one of the seven bones which make up the tarsus of the [[Ankle and Foot]]. It is located on the medial aspect of the foot, next to the cuboid bone, anterior to the head of the talus and posterior to the cuneiform bones. It is one of the five bones of the midfoot.
which make up the hind and mid-foot.  
=== Structure  ===
=== Structure  ===
The navicular is a small irregular bone. Its posterior surface is concave and it has two faint ridges anteriorly to correspond with the articulation with the three cuneiform bones. There is a large protuberance on the inferomedial aspect


== Function  ==
== Function  ==


=== Articulations  ===
=== Articulations  ===  


=== Muscle attachments  ===
=== Muscle attachments  ===

Revision as of 20:54, 20 September 2020

Original Editor - Alex Benham

Top Contributors - Alex Benham, Lucinda hampton, Fasuba Ayobami and Kim Jackson

Description[edit | edit source]

The navicular bone is one of the seven bones which make up the tarsus of the Ankle and Foot. It is located on the medial aspect of the foot, next to the cuboid bone, anterior to the head of the talus and posterior to the cuneiform bones. It is one of the five bones of the midfoot.

Structure[edit | edit source]

The navicular is a small irregular bone. Its posterior surface is concave and it has two faint ridges anteriorly to correspond with the articulation with the three cuneiform bones. There is a large protuberance on the inferomedial aspect

Function[edit | edit source]

Articulations[edit | edit source]

Muscle attachments[edit | edit source]

Clinical relevance[edit | edit source]

Resources[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]