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An Anatomic Study of the Extensor Tendons of the Human Hand  

Kang, Moon-Seok (Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, College of Medicine, Soonchunhyang University)
Jung, Sung-Gyun (Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, College of Medicine, Soonchunhyang University)
Nam, Seoung-Min (Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, College of Medicine, Soonchunhyang University)
Shin, Ho-Seong (Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, College of Medicine, Soonchunhyang University)
Kim, Yong-Bae (Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, College of Medicine, Soonchunhyang University)
Publication Information
Archives of Plastic Surgery / v.38, no.6, 2011 , pp. 836-844 More about this Journal
Abstract
Purpose: Hands are the chief organs for physically manipulating the environment, using anywhere from the roughest motor skills to the finest, and since the fingertips contain some of the densest areas of nerve endings on the human body, they are continuously used organ with complex functions, and therefore, often gets injured. To prevent any functional loss, a detailed anatomical knowledge is required to have a perfect surgical treatment. Also it is necessary to have a thorough understanding of arrangements of the human extensor tendons and intertendinous connections when tenoplasty or tendon transfer is required. We performed a study of the arrangements of the human extensor tendons and the configuration of the intertendinous connections over the dorsum of the wrist and hand. Methods: A total of 58 hands from Korean cadavers were dissected. The arrangements of extensor indicis proprius, extensor digitorum communis, and extensor digiti minimi tendons and intertendinous connections were studied. Results: The most common distribution patterns of the extensor tendons of the fingers were as follows: a single extensor indicis proprius (EIP) tendon which inserted ulnar to the extensor digitorum-index (EDC-index); a single EDC-index; a single EDC-middle; a double EDC-ring; an absent EDC-little; a double extensor digiti minimi (EDM), a single EDC-index (98.3%), a single EDC-middle (62%), a double EDC-ring (50%), and an absent (65.5%) or a single (32.8%) EDC-little. A double (70.6%) EDM tendons were seen. Intertendinous connections were classified into 3 types: type 1 with thin filamentous type, type 2 with a thick filamentous type, and type 3 with a tendinous type subdivided to r shaped 3r type and y shaped 3y type. The most common patterns were type 1 in the 2nd intermetacarpal space, type 2 in the 3rd intermetacarpal space, and type 3r in the 4th intermetacarpal space. And in the present study, we observed one case of the extensor digitorum brevis manus (EDBM) on the boht side. Conclusion: A knowledge of both the usual and possible variations of the extensor tendon and the intertendinous connection is useful in the identification and repair of these structures.
Keywords
Extensor digitorum communis; Extensor indicis proprius; Extensor digiti minimi; Intertendinous connections;
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