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Another entity known as appendicular lump is talked about quite often.
The appendicular skeleton is composed of 126 bones in the human body.
These remains include 28 vertebrae and elements of the appendicular skeleton.
It is located in the mesoappendix and accompanies the appendicular artery.
The appendicular skeleton is divided into six major regions:
These are the axial skeleton and the appendicular skeleton.
The appendicular skeleton forms during development from cartlilage, by the process of endochondral ossification.
The appendicular skeleton contains the fore and hindlimbs.
The appendicular artery, a branch of the ileocolic artery.
Later the disease progresses in the ventral, appendicular, caudal and distal regions of the body.
The axial skeleton and the appendicular skeleton together form the complete skeleton.
The appendicular vein is the vein which drains blood from the vermiform appendix.
Unlike the axial skeleton, the appendicular skeleton is unfused.
Appendicular ataxia results in jerky, uncoordinated movements of the limbs, as though each muscle were working independently from the others.
The appendicular vein drains into the ileocolic vein.
Appendicular elements lack smoothly finished articular surfaces."
The axial and appendicular muscles become atrophied, which causes difficulty developing motor skills including standing, sitting, and walking.
Numerous other bones have been found, mainly caudal vertebrae but also dorsals and elements of the appendicular skeleton.
Appendicular elements with smoothly finished articular surfaces, tarsus and carpus well ossified."
These bones are organized into a longitudinal axis, the axial skeleton, to which the appendicular skeleton is attached.
The Axioappendicular muscles are the muscles that extend between the axial and (superior or inferior) appendicular skeletons.
Other symptoms such an inflammation in eyes and axial and appendicular skeleton, lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly, are less common.
A curious appendicular finger glowed crimson amid the dour browns and greens of the earth, prodding out from the bottom of the main land mass.
Tumor with invasion of skeleton (axial or appendicular) or perineural invasion of skull base.
The specimen, consisting of very fragmentary elements of the skull, the axial and the appendicular skeletons, was described by Coria et al. in late 1998.