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No, the Tibia is part of the knee, located next to the Fibula.
No, an injury to the lateral side of your ankle may involve the fibula. An injury to the ankle on the medial side may involve the tibia.
The long bones are the femur (thigh bone), the tibia, fibula (2 leg bones)
Ligaments ---- The sets of bones in vertebrates like us are: in the fore limb (arm), the humerus, radius and ulna. In the hind limb (leg) are the femur, tibia and fibula.
The tibia or shin bone, in human anatomy, is found medial (towards the middle) and anterior (towards the front) to the other such bone, the fibula. It is the second-longest bone in the human body, the largest being the femur. The tibia articulates with the femur and patella superiorly, the fibula laterally and with the ankle inferiorly.
The tibia is medial to the fibula. The tibia is the larger of the lower leg bones.
The fibula is lateral to the tibia. The fibula is the smaller of the two lower leg bones.
The fibula is lateral to the tibia. The fibula is the smaller of the two lower leg bones.
What the tibia is to the fibula
The medial malleolus is located on the tibia. The fibula forms the lateral malleolus.
The fibula is lateral to the tibia.
Ulna is medial to radius in the forearm and tibia is medial to fibula in the shank. However it is tibia which is homologous to radius (not fibula), because the form of those two bones are the same.
The fibula is located lateral to the tibia. In overall anatomical position, the tibia is medial in the body, and the tibia lateral. Both are located in the lower leg. The tibia articulates with the patella proximally, the fibula laterally, and the talus distally.
The Lateral Malleolus is part of the fibula.
The fibula is the thinner bone lateral to the tibia. The fibula is the smaller bone of the lower leg.
They are the femur, the tibia, and the fibula. Have fun learning about your bones.
tibia and fibula. radius and ulna