The carpus is not proximal to the brachium. The carpus is actually distal to the brachium. The carpal region is the wrist.
The carpus or carpal joint is the wrist. The proximal bones are those of the forearm: the radius and ulna. The distal bones are those of the palm: the metacarpals.
the forearm
anterbrachium is the forearm,region between elbow and the wrist while brachium is the arm,region between shoulder and the elbow
Radial Collateral Ligament
pisiform, triquetral & lunate
Yes - the brachium (arm) is proximal (closer to the point of origin) than the antibrachium (forearm).
Antebrachium
DPB = dextral +proximal+brachium
The carpus is distal to the scapulohumeral joint. In other words, your wrist is further away from the mid-line of your body than the joint between your shoulder and humerus. proximal: close to body distal: further from body
The carpus or carpal joint is the wrist. The proximal bones are those of the forearm: the radius and ulna. The distal bones are those of the palm: the metacarpals.
the forearm
The antebrachial region is distal to the axillary region. This means that the forearm (antebrachium) is situated below the arm (axilla) when the body is in the anatomical position.
brachium
anterbrachium is the forearm,region between elbow and the wrist while brachium is the arm,region between shoulder and the elbow
I'm afraid that your question is meaningless - the wrist is the carpus.
The word 'carpus' is a correct noun as a word for the bones of the wrist.
Brachium