This is the most commonly fractured bone of the hand.
What is the fifth metacarpal? (Boxer's fracture)
This muscle wrinkles the skin on the ulnar side of the hand
What is the palmaris brevis?
This extensor tendon lives in the third dorsal compartment.
What is extensor pollicis longus (EPL)?
Abductor pollicis brevis is innervated by what nerve?
What is the median nerve?
This type of weather is often "felt" in the bones.
What is rain?
This bone rotates around the ulna during forearm pronation and supination.
What is the radius?
This is the strongest muscle of the thumb intrinsic muscles.
What is the adductor pollicis?
This is the percentage of the population reported to have a palmaris longus tendon unit.
What is 85%
Feeling a 3.61 monofilament during a Semmes-Weinstein test indicates this.
What is diminished light tough?
This type of pasta is favored by upper extremity therapists.
What is elbow macaroni?
This term refers to the gross movement of bones in relation to one another and is usually visible externally.
This is the only muscle(s) that arises from and inserts into a tendon.
What are the lumbricals?
Landsmeer's ligament is the non-anatomical name for this.
What is the oblique retinacular ligament?
For a quick check of ulnar nerve status, these muscles could be tested.
What are dorsal interossei?
Round bails of hay have been classified as harmful to cows because they lack this type of nutritious diet.
What is a square meal.
This bone is involved in Kienbock's disease
What is the lunate?
This muscle is active during all motions of the wrist.
What is the extensor carpi ulnaris?
This is the elbow's main stabilizer to valgus strain.
What is the medial collateral ligament.
Loss of opposition is the major functional deficit of the thumb following palsy of this nerve.
What is median nerve?
What is to Scandinavian?
The combination of the hamate, pisiform, trapezium, and the scaphoid serve as the attachment sites of what ligament?
What is the transverse carpal ligament?
This is the insertion point for the brachialis.
What is the coronoid process of the ulna?
Along with the volar plate, these ligaments are implicated in the development of PIPJ flexion contractures.
What are check-rein ligaments and collateral ligaments of the PIP joint?
Injury of this nerve can be characterized by radially oriented wrist extension and inability to extend the MCP's of the digits and to retropulse the thumb.
(this nerve innervates ECRB, ECU, EDC, EIP, EPL, EDM, APL, and the EPB).
What is the posterior interosseous nerve (PIN)?
The reason the last part to stop working when you die is your pupils.
What is They dilate?