The brachium contains the humerus bone, which is the upper arm bone. The antebrachium contains the radius and ulna bones, which are the two bones in the forearm.
The upper arm, from shoulder to elbow, is the brachium. The lower arm, from elbow to wrist, is the antebrachium.
The antebrachium is the forearm. It contains the radius on the lateral side and the ulna on the medial side.
The radius and ulna are the two bones that make up the antebrachium.
brachium or brachial region
The radius bone in the forearm is distal to the cubitus (ulna) and proximal to the carpus (wrist bones).
Yes - the brachium (arm) is proximal (closer to the point of origin) than the antibrachium (forearm).
The antebrachium refers to the segment of the upper limb between the elbow and the wrist, containing the radius and ulna bones. The brachium, on the other hand, refers to the region between the shoulder and the elbow, which includes the humerus bone. In simple terms, the antebrachium is the forearm, while the brachium is the upper arm.
The ligament that attaches the antebrachium (forearm) to the brachium (arm) is called the elbow joint capsule. It is a strong fibrous structure that helps stabilize and support the elbow joint during movement.
The upper arm, from shoulder to elbow, is the brachium. The lower arm, from elbow to wrist, is the antebrachium.
antebrachial (or antebrachium) = the part of the arm between the brachium (upper arm) and the carpus (wrist); known as the "forearm". axillary = armpit
lateral bone of the antebrachium
The antebrachium is the forearm. It contains the radius on the lateral side and the ulna on the medial side.
The carpus is not proximal to the brachium. The carpus is actually distal to the brachium. The carpal region is the wrist.
The hand is immediately distal to the carpal region. In particular, the metacarpals and phalanges are distal to the carpal region.
the radius
flex
No - supinated.