Encyclopedia > Flexor digitorum profundus

  Article Content

Flexor digitorum profundus muscle

Redirected from Flexor digitorum profundus

The flexor digitorum profundis is a muscle in the forearm that flexes the fingers. It is called an extrinsic muscle, because it action is at a different location to the main body of the muscle.

Flexor digitorum profundis, along with flexor digitorum superficialis have long tendons that run down the arm and through the carpal tunnel[?] that attach to the palmar side of the phalanges of the fingers. This muscle originates from the anterior side of the ulna.

Flexor digitorum profundis lies deep to superficialis, but it attaches more distally. To get around this problem profundus's tendons go through the tendons of superficialis, and end up attaching to the distal phlanx.

It is one of the two flexor muscles of the forearm that are not supplied by the median nerve. (The other is flexor carpi ulnaris[?].) The medial two digits of profundus are supplied by the ulnar nerve.



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
List of closed London Underground stations

... tube station[?] Mark Lane tube station[?] Marlborough Road tube station[?] North End tube station[?] (aka Bull & Bush; never opened) North Weald tube station[?] ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 47.5 ms