The Presence of the Peroneus Tertius Muscle in Thai People

 The peroneus tertius is a small partially separated portion of the extensor digitorum longus, as its fifth tendon, but has an important role in locomotion and in the evolution of human beings. It supports and stabilizes the longitudinal arches of the foot while standing and locomotion during biped...

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Main Authors: Kunnika Chatyingmongkol, Jantima Roongruangchai, Wimon Rojanavanichkit
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mahidol University 2004-05-01
Series:Siriraj Medical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://he02.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/sirirajmedj/article/view/245511
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spelling doaj-0a065639e81f45468b8f81f26d8a29022021-08-13T10:05:51ZengMahidol UniversitySiriraj Medical Journal2228-80822004-05-01565The Presence of the Peroneus Tertius Muscle in Thai PeopleKunnika Chatyingmongkol0Jantima Roongruangchai1Wimon Rojanavanichkit2Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine Siriraj Hospital, Mahidol UniversityDepartment of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine Siriraj Hospital, Mahidol UniversityDepartment of Rehabilitation Medicine, Faculty of Medicine Siriraj Hospital, Mahidol University  The peroneus tertius is a small partially separated portion of the extensor digitorum longus, as its fifth tendon, but has an important role in locomotion and in the evolution of human beings. It supports and stabilizes the longitudinal arches of the foot while standing and locomotion during bipedalism. In particular, it assists in everting the foot, which is a characteristically human movement. This study was performed by dissecting 247 legs from 144 cadavers. In these cadavers, we found a high percentage of the presence of this muscle, the peroneus tertius, (95.55%). The absence of the muscle was rare, only in 4.45%. Regarding the muscle size, which was calibrated at the ankle joint and compared with the common tendon of the extensor digitorum longus at the same area, the proportion was very large at 34.77% in the right leg and 39.55% in the left leg. The results of this study emphasized and clarified the important role of this muscle. https://he02.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/sirirajmedj/article/view/245511Peroneus tertius
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kunnika Chatyingmongkol
Jantima Roongruangchai
Wimon Rojanavanichkit
spellingShingle Kunnika Chatyingmongkol
Jantima Roongruangchai
Wimon Rojanavanichkit
The Presence of the Peroneus Tertius Muscle in Thai People
Siriraj Medical Journal
Peroneus tertius
author_facet Kunnika Chatyingmongkol
Jantima Roongruangchai
Wimon Rojanavanichkit
author_sort Kunnika Chatyingmongkol
title The Presence of the Peroneus Tertius Muscle in Thai People
title_short The Presence of the Peroneus Tertius Muscle in Thai People
title_full The Presence of the Peroneus Tertius Muscle in Thai People
title_fullStr The Presence of the Peroneus Tertius Muscle in Thai People
title_full_unstemmed The Presence of the Peroneus Tertius Muscle in Thai People
title_sort presence of the peroneus tertius muscle in thai people
publisher Mahidol University
series Siriraj Medical Journal
issn 2228-8082
publishDate 2004-05-01
description  The peroneus tertius is a small partially separated portion of the extensor digitorum longus, as its fifth tendon, but has an important role in locomotion and in the evolution of human beings. It supports and stabilizes the longitudinal arches of the foot while standing and locomotion during bipedalism. In particular, it assists in everting the foot, which is a characteristically human movement. This study was performed by dissecting 247 legs from 144 cadavers. In these cadavers, we found a high percentage of the presence of this muscle, the peroneus tertius, (95.55%). The absence of the muscle was rare, only in 4.45%. Regarding the muscle size, which was calibrated at the ankle joint and compared with the common tendon of the extensor digitorum longus at the same area, the proportion was very large at 34.77% in the right leg and 39.55% in the left leg. The results of this study emphasized and clarified the important role of this muscle.
topic Peroneus tertius
url https://he02.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/sirirajmedj/article/view/245511
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