Your thumb is connected to your hand and your hand is connected to your arm.
He has a D on his hand by his thumb
The location of the Herpes lesions will determine the nerve involvement. If the pain or numbness is on the "inside" of the arm and hand (the "pinkie" finger side), then it is ulnar in origin. If the symptoms appear on the "outside" of the hand and arm (the thumb side) then the nerve involved is the radial. Karin Ivester
Your Shoulder and your Hand are connected to your arm on opposite ends.
The ratio of the human thumb to the length of the arm is usually 1 to 15. The thumb's length can fit into the size of the arm an approximately 15 times or more.
you've probbably got arthreitus
Finger next to the thumb, i.e. To the immediate right of the thumb on your right hand To the immediate left of the thumb on your left hand
on the thumb side of the arm
Musically, it would be connected to the "arm bone" (or "wrist bone", depending on the version).Anatomically, there's no such thing as a "hand bone" (there's no "arm bone" or "wrist bone" either), at least not in the sense that there's a single bone known by that name. The hand (and arm, and wrist) contain multiple bones.The bones in the hand are called phalanges (the bones in the fingers and thumb) and metacarpals (the bones buried in the palm). If your version of "Dem Bones" has the hand bone connected to the arm bone without an intermediate "wrist bone", then the "hand bone" would include the carpals (in the wrist) as well (or maybe those are lumped into "arm bone"; the song is so imprecise it's hard to tell).The carpals all have individual names. The metacarpals are numbered.based on what finger they're in (the thumb is 1, and the numbering goes up moving toward the pinky). The phalanges are numbered as well (the same number as the metacarpal they connect with), with the one that actually has a joint with the metacarpal being the "proximal" phalange, and the one furthest away being the "distal" phalange. In the fingers (but not the thumb) there's a phalange between those two, known (sensibly) as the "intermediate" phalange. So the "fourth proximal phalange" of the left hand would be the one normally surrounded by a wedding ring.Technically that doesn't answer your question, so here's the literal answer. This should have been obvious, but the "hand bone(s)" are located in the hand.
THUMB
The human hand has 27 bones, 14 of which are phalanges, or fingers. The metacarpals are the bones that connect the fingers and the wrist. Each hand has five metacarpals. The thumb is connected to the trapezium and the joints are called metacarpophlangeal joints.
well, you got your: foot bone, connected to your leg bone, connected to your hip bone, connected to your chest bone, connected to your arm bone, connected to your hand bone, 'dem bones, 'dem bones 'dem dry bones!
Visiting a doctor and using a sort of cast for the arm including the thumb.