antebrachial การใช้
- Both genders have small, dark antebrachial ( forearm ) ducts.
- It also takes origin from the adjacent intermuscular septa and from the antebrachial fascia.
- The median antebrachial and the basilic vein.
- The brachial gland is larger than the antebrachial gland, covered in short hair around the periphery, and has a naked crescent-shaped orifice near the center.
- Both males and females have a scent gland on their inner forearm ( antebrachial ) approximately 25 cm above the wrist joint, however, in the males, this is covered by a spur.
- It supplies the skin of the lower two-thirds of the dorso-lateral surface of the forearm, communicating with the superficial branch of the radial nerve and the dorsal antebrachial cutaneous branch of the radial.
- In displays of aggression, males engage in a social display behaviour called " stink fighting ", which involves impregnating their tails with secretions from the antebrachial and brachial glands and waving the scented tail at male rivals.
- The lower branch pierces the deep fascia below the insertion of the Deltoideus, and descends along the lateral side of the arm and elbow, and then along the back of the forearm to the wrist, supplying the skin in its course, and joining, near its termination, with the dorsal branch of the lateral antebrachial cutaneous nerve.
- The entire arm is referred to as the brachium and brachial, the front of the elbow as the antecubitis and antecubital, the back of the elbow as the olecranon or olecranal, the forearm as the antebrachium and antebrachial, the wrist as the carpus and carpal area, the hand as the manus and manual, the palm as the palma and palmar, the thumb as the pollex, and the fingers as the digits, phalanges, and phalangeal.
- The "'antebrachial fascia "'( "'antibrachial fascia "'or "'deep fascia of forearm "') continuous above with the brachial fascia, is a dense, membranous investment, which forms a general sheath for the muscles in this region; it is attached, behind, to the olecranon and dorsal border of the ulna, and gives off from its deep surface numerous intermuscular septa, which enclose each muscle separately.