The Latin plural is bursae. The English plural is bursas.
Plural
No. It is the Latin singular.The Latin plural is bursae. The English plural is bursas.
The Latin plural is bursae. The English plural is bursas.
Bursae
The three types of bursae are subcutaneous bursae (located between the skin and underlying bone or muscle), submuscular bursae (situated between muscles and bone), and subtendinous bursae (found between tendons and bones).
Fibrous connective tissue forms on the bursa. This type of tissue prevents friction within the joints. The plural of bursa is bursas or bursae.
In the knee there are four bursae, and all can become inflamed with overuse.
bursae
what bursae is found when one tendon crosses another tendon
A bursa (plural bursae) is a fibrous, fluid-filled sac found near synovial joints that helps decrease friction near a joint.
bursae are flattened fibrous sacs, while tendon sheaths are elongated fibrous sacs.
Bursae. They contain synovial fluid and help reduce friction between moving structures such as bones, tendons, and muscles.