Tibia

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Bone: Tibia
Plan of ossification of the tibia. From three centers.
Gray's subject #61 256
MeSH Tibia

The tibia is the larger of the two bones in the leg below the knee in vertebrates.

Contents

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.

In the male, its direction is vertical, and parallel with the bone of the opposite side, but in the female it has a slightly oblique direction downward and lateralward, to compensate for the greater obliquity of the femur.

It is prismoid in form, expanded above, where it enters into the knee-joint, contracted in the lower third, and again enlarged but to a lesser extent below.

The tibia is connected to the fibula by an interosseous membrane, forming a type of joint called a syndesmoses.

The tibia derives its arterial blood supply from two sources:[1]

  1. the nutrient artery (main source)
  2. periosteal vessels derived from the anterior tibial artery

  1. ^ NELSON G, KELLY P, PETERSON L, JANES J. "Blood supply of the human tibia". J Bone Joint Surg Am 42-A: 625-36. PMID 13854090. 

This article was originally based on an entry from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy. As such, some of the information contained herein may be outdated. Please edit the article if this is the case, and feel free to remove this notice when it is no longer relevant.

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