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The medial bicipital groove is seen on the surface anatomy of the upper arm.
Tenderness where the biceps meets the shoulder (bicipital groove).
It lies in the cubital fossa superficial to the bicipital aponeurosis.
It should be distinguished from the bicipital groove or intertubercular sulcus, which is not a surface anatomy structure.
The bicipital aponeurosis originates from the distal insertion of the biceps brachii.
Passing by the bicipital aponeurosis (also known as lacertus fibrosus)
Cunningham Shoulder Reduction is a method of shoulder reduction that utilizes bicipital massage and the patient's own cooperation.
The inflammation usually occurs along the groove (bicipital groove) where the tendon passes over the humerus to attach just above the shoulder joint.
Bicipital tenosynovitis is tendinitis or inflammation of the tendon and sheath lining of the biceps muscle.
Between the greater tubercle and the lesser tubercle is the intertubercular sulcus (bicipital groove).
The procedure can also define abnormalities of the glenoid labrum and bicipital tendon and sheath.
In complete tears, discontinuity exists, and if the bicipital aponeurosis is also disrupted, retraction called a "Popeye's deformity" sign.
Disorders such as calcification of the rotator cuff, bicipital tendinitis, or carpal tunnel syndrome may increase chances of tennis elbow.
They all end in a flat tendon, about 5 cm in breadth, which is inserted into the lateral lip of the bicipital groove of the humerus.
Some individuals (about 3% of the population) have a superficial ulnar artery that runs superficially to the bicipital aponeurosis instead of underneath it.
By rotating the humerus laterally, this contact is delayed because the greater tubercle is pulled back so that the bicipital groove faces the coracoacromial ligament.
Other causes are compression of the nerve from the fibrous arch of the flexor superficialis, or the thickening of the bicipital aponeurosis.
The Cunningham technique involves massaging the bicipital muscle in the mid humerus, with the patient's affected arm adducted, and the elbow flexed, while the physician massages the biceps.
Bicipital tendinitis is an inflammation of one of the tendons that attach the muscle (biceps) on the front of the upper arm bone (humerus) to the shoulder joint.
The most recent style of shoulder reduction is the Cunningham shoulder reduction, utilizing adduction of a flexed arm with concurrent bicipital massage and postero-superior shrug by the patient.
In Neanderthals, the radial bicipital tuberosities were larger than in modern humans, which suggests they were probably able to use their biceps for supination over a wider range of pronation-supination.
Its lips are called, respectively, the crests of the greater and lesser tubercles (bicipital ridges), and form the upper parts of the anterior and medial borders of the body of the bone.
Distally, biceps ends in two tendons: the stronger attaches to (inserts into) the radial tuberosity on the radius, while the other, the bicipital aponeurosis, radiates into the ulnar part of the antebrachial fascia.
The infraspinatus and teres minor fuse near their musculotendinous junctions, while the supraspinatus and subscapularis tendons join as a sheath that surrounds the biceps tendon at the entrance of the bicipital groove.
If patients mention reproduction of symptoms to the forearm during elbow flexion of 120-130 degrees with the forearm in maximal supination, then the lesion may be localized to the area underneath the lacertus fibrosus (also known as bicipital aponeurosis).