Interchondral articulations
Interchondral articulations | |
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Sternocostal and interchondral articulations seen from the front | |
Details | |
Latin | Articulationes interchondrales |
Identifiers | |
Gray's | p.304 |
Dorlands /Elsevier | a_64/12161296 |
TA | A03.3.07.001 |
FMA | 71378 |
Anatomical terminology |
The interchondral articulations are the joints formed between the costal cartilages of the ribs.
The contiguous borders of the sixth, seventh, and eighth, and sometimes those of the ninth and tenth, costal cartilages articulate with each other by small, smooth, oblong facets.
Each articulation is enclosed in a thin articular capsule, lined by synovial membrane and strengthened laterally and medially by ligamentous fibers (interchondral ligaments) which pass from one cartilage to the other.
Sometimes the fifth costal cartilages, more rarely the ninth and tenth, articulate by their lower borders with the adjoining cartilages by small oval facets; more frequently the connection is by a few ligamentous fibers.
See also
- Human rib cage
- Rib
References
This article incorporates text in the public domain from the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)
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