The radial artery
Radial Artery
A radial styloidectomy is a procedure to treat an arthritic condition on the radial bone side of the wrist. Radial -- radi = ray (radial bone) + al = pertaining to Styloid -- sty = slender projection + oid = resembles -ectomy -- ec = from + tom = cut + y = procedure (surgically remove)
It overlies the radius, the main bone in the forearm.
Radial artery
Tibial pulse or more technically the Tibialis posterior pulse.
The radial head is located at the top of the radius bone in your forearm near the elbow. The distal end of the radius is near the wrist. So therefore the radial head is not located near the distal end.
The Capitate bone. It is flanked by the Trapezoid (Radial) [and the Trapesium (the thumb)] and the Hamate (Ulnal) and socketed in the Scaphoid (R) and the Lunate (U).
Cortical bone facilitates bone's main functions: to support the whole body, protect organs, provide levers for movement, and store and release chemical elements, mainly calcium. The posterior aspect is the back side. The radial head is the elbow end of the radius (the thicker bone in your arm)
This bone is called the ulna. The bone on the thumb side is called the radius.
The radius bone (or radial bone) is one of the two largest bones of the forearm, the other one being the ulna.
A pulse can be found where and artery passes over a bone, for example, in your wrist (also known as the radial pulse).