The cutaneous ligaments of the human digits are delicate functional structures essential for normal skin stability during digital movements. These ligaments extend bilaterally between the phalanx and the finger dermis, either posteriorly (Cleland's ligaments) or anteriorly (Grayson's ligaments) to the digital neurovascular bundles. We have performed a series of detailed anatomical dissections of the human digits so as to investigate morphometrically Cleland's and Grayson's ligaments and their topographic arrangements. Data were statistically compared between fingers, respecting both side (left or right) and sex, in an attempt to clarify some of the morphologic variations of these structures. The cutaneous ligaments of the human digits have been analyzed bilaterally both in 30 fixed cadavers (300 adult human digits) and in 10 nonfixed human cadaveric digits. A computerized morphometrical investigation of the human digits and their Cleland's and Grayson's ligaments has been performed and the resulting quantitative data have been statistically assessed, comparing groups according to finger, phalanx, side (left or right hands), and sex. The ratio between the origin and insertion (O:I) of these ligaments indicate a divergent arrangement of fibers, with values varying from 0.52 to 0.84, depending on the phalanx and finger analyzed. Our morphometrical data provide normal reference values, mainly for Grayson's ligaments, that can be useful in the comparison with the respective measurements obtained in Dupuytren's disease. Morphological bases are also provided, which may be relevant either in computerized tomography or magnetic resonance imaging involving the hand region and in their application in surgical procedures of the human hand.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ca.20241 | DOI Listing |
J Hand Surg Eur Vol
November 2019
Department of Plastic Surgery, University of Groningen and University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands.
The anatomy in the region of the palmodigital junction has been relatively little studied, but it is very relevant for the surgical treatment of Dupuytren's disease. To study the microanatomy of the palmodigital junction, we dissected 26 cadaveric digits from 13 human cadaveric hands using microsurgical techniques. The dynamics of the different ligaments were studied in three hands preserved by Thiel's method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Craniofac Surg
May 2018
Choi's Aesthetic Plastic Surgical Clinic, Seoul, Korea.
The aim of this study is to search for the origin of the term "ligament' in the face, present its status, and suggest a principle to rectify the use of unclear terminology.The structure that connects the zygoma to the skin was first presented by McGregor (1959). Kaye (1981), in describing his "extended facelift," wrote that the adherent area of the cheek over the malar eminence (McGregor's patch) usually requires sharp dissection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Hand Surg Eur Vol
May 2014
The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
This study reviews the literature on the anatomy of the connective tissues surrounding the distal interphalangeal joint and further characterizes the three-dimensional relationships of these structures with ultra-high field magnetic resonance imaging. Ten cadaver fingers, fixed in a solution of 5% agar and 4% formalin, were imaged utilising an ultrashield 16.4 Tesla ultra-high field magnetic resonance imaging, yielding a total of 4000 images.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Hand Surg Eur Vol
October 2010
Aquaitaine Hand Institute, Pessac, France.
The term 'fascia' has been applied to a large number of very different tissues within the hand. These range from aligned ligamentous formations such as the longitudinal bands of the palmar fascia or Grayson's and Cleland's ligaments, to the loose packing tissues that surround all of the moving structures within the hand. In other parts of the body the terms 'superficial' and 'deep fascia' are often used but these have little application in the hand and fingers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Hand Surg Eur Vol
February 2010
Department of Hand and Peripheral Nerve Surgery, Royal North Shore Hospital University of Sydney and Hornsby Hand Centre, Hornsby Ku-ring-gai Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
Displacement of the neurovascular bundle within a digit affected by Dupuytren's disease can occur when disease superficial to the neurovascular bundle is connected to disease deep to it. Contraction of such cords results in spiralling of the neurovascular bundle, classically when a pretendinous cord connects with the lateral digital sheet and Grayson's ligament via the oblique cord, but also in association with an isolated digital cord. We describe six cases in which cord formation and contraction resulted in a distal spiral, which may occur in isolation or in combination with a classical proximal spiral, creating a double spiral or corkscrew neurovascular bundle.
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