The Femur, Tibia and Fibula (and patella).
The bone above your patella is called your femur.The bones below your patella are called your tibiaand fibula.
14 bones
Patella
No.
There are two long bones in the stifle joint. The stifle joint is made up of the femur, tibia and patella. The femur and tibia are long bones, and the patella is a sesamoid.
The three bones that contribute to the knee joint are the femur (thigh bone), tibia (shin bone), and patella (kneecap). These bones work together to allow for the movement and stability of the knee joint.
The class of bone based on its shape that the patella is a good example of are sesamoid bones. The patella is also known as the kneecap.
The femur articulates with two bones: the patella (kneecap) and the tibia (shinbone). The patella acts as a protective covering for the front of the knee joint and provides leverage for the muscles that extend the knee joint.
The bones of the lower limb from superior to inferior are the femur (thigh bone), patella (kneecap), tibia and fibula (lower leg bones), tarsal bones (ankle bones), metatarsal bones (foot bones), and phalanges (toe bones).
No, the patella is not proximal to the ulna. The patella is the kneecap, and is on the lower extremity. The ulna is the smaller of the forearm bones. Since the structures are on different limbs, you can't use the directionals proximal and distal. However, the patella is inferior and medial to the ulna.
phalanges, metatarsals, patella,
Radius, Scapula, Patella.