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Calcaneus

From WikiSM
(Redirected from Sustentaculum calcanei)

Description

Drawings illustrate the anatomy of the calcaneus, including the anterior process of the calcaneus (a),anterior facet of the talus (A), anterior facet of the cuboid bone (C), groove for the flexor hallucis longus tendon (Fhl), lateral process (Lp), middle facet of the talus (M), medial process (Me), posterior facet (P), peroneus longus groove (Pl), sustentaculum tali (S), sulcus calcanei (SC), posterior tuberosity (T), and trochlear process (Tp)[1]
Lateral radiograph of the calcaneus labeled[2]
Axial radiograph of the calcaneus labeled[2]
Calcaneal anatomy. Diagram depicts key anatomic components of calcaneus in lateral, superior, and medial projections. FHL = flexor hallucis longus.[3]

Alternative Names

  • Calcaneus
  • Calcaneum
  • Plural: calcanei or calcanea

General

Anatomic description

  • Cuboid articulates with the triangular anterior surface
  • Talus and Navicular share a space called the talocalcaneonavicular joint
  • Thalamic portion: inferior to the posterior articular facet is condensed to approximately 1 cm
  • Calcaneal sulcus: groove that runs posteromedially
  • Middle calcaneal facet: supported by the sustentaculum tali and articulates with the middle facet of the talus
  • Anterior calcaneal facet: articulates with anterior talar facet, supported by calcaneal beak

Articular facets

  • Superolateral fragment contains the articular facets
  • Superior articular surface contains three facets that articulate with the Talus
  • Posterior facet is the largest and is the major weight bearing surface
  • Middle facet is anteromedial on sustentaculum tali
  • Anterior facet is often confluent with middle facet

Sinus tarsi

  • Canal formed between calcaneal sulcus (interosseous sulcus or calcaneal groove) and talar sulcus
  • Occupied by the interosseous talocalcaneal ligament

Sustentaculum Tali (talar shelf)

Bifurcate ligament

  • Connects the dorsal aspect of the anterior process to the cuboid and navicular

Lateral surface

  • Calcaneal tubercle (or trochlear process)
  • Flat and subcutaneous, with a central peroneal tubercle for the attachment of the Calcaneofibular Ligament
  • Lateral Talocalcaneal Ligament attaches antero-superiorly to the peroneal tubercle

Medial surface

  • Talus attaches via Interosseous Ligament, thick medial talocalcaneal ligaments
  • The groove inferior to it transmits the Flexor Hallucis Longus tendon
  • The neurovascular bundle runs adjacent to the medial border of the calcaneus

Embryology

  • Ossification center develops between 4th and 7th week of fetal development

Muscle Attachments

Actions

  • Transfers most of the body weight from the limb to the ground
  • Plantarflexion
  • Flexion of the knee
  • Steadying the leg on the ankle during standing

Articulations

Vascular Supply

  • Branches of Posterior Tibial Artery
    • Medial calcaneal arteries
    • Medial and lateral plantar arteries
  • Branches of the Anterior Tibial Artery
    • Artery of the tarsal sinus and tarsal canal (via lateral tarsal artery)
  • Branches of Fibular Artery
    • Lateral calcaneal arteries
    • Posterior calcaneal arterial anastomosis

Innervation


Clinical Significance


See Also


References

  1. Bencardino, Jenny, Zehava S. Rosenberg, and Emmanuelle Delfaut. "MR imaging in sports injuries of the foot and ankle." Magnetic resonance imaging clinics of North America 7.1 (1999): 131-149.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Image courtesy of wikiradiography.net
  3. Yu, Sarah M., and Joseph S. Yu. "Calcaneal avulsion fractures: an often forgotten diagnosis." American Journal of Roentgenology 205.5 (2015): 1061-1067.
Created by:
John Kiel on 30 June 2021 22:05:04
Authors:
Last edited:
20 November 2025 19:12:06
Category: