The 'humerus' is a
long bone in the
arm or fore-legs (animals) that runs from the
shoulder to the
elbow. On a
skeleton, it fits between the
scapula and the
ulna. It consists of the following three sections:
★
Upper extremity of humerus
★
Body of humerus
★
Lower extremity of humerus
Articulations
A
bursa lies between the scapula and the chest wall, and allows the scapula to move over the chest wall. Movements of the shoulder are actually often combined movements of the
glenohumeral joint as well as movement of the scapula on the chest wall.
The distal end of the humerus (at the elbow) creates a hinge joint with the ulna, allowing only
flexion and
extension. This happens on the
trochlea of the humerus. Two pits at this end of the humerus (the
coronoid fossa and the
olecranon fossa) allow the ulna room to move, but prevent it from over-flexing/extending.
There is also a ''pivot joint'' between the ''capitulum'' (sometimes called the ''capitellum'') of the humerus, and the head of the
radius. This allows the hand to pronate and supinate (turn to face downwards or upwards).
Muscle attachments
A variety of
muscles attach to the humerus. These enable movement at the elbow and at the shoulder.
The
rotator cuff muscles attach at the ''proximal'' humerus, and can rotate and abduct the arm at the shoulder.
Some of the
forearm muscles, (such as
pronator teres, and the
flexors and
extensors of the wrist) also attach to the ''distal'' humerus.
| 'Muscle' | 'Attachment' |
| Extensor carpi radialis brevis muscle | lateral epicondyle |
| Extensor carpi ulnaris muscle | lateral epicondyle (and also to the posterior border of the ulna |
| Extensor digiti minimi muscle | lateral epicondyle |
| Extensor digitorum muscle | lateral epicondyle |
| Supinator muscle | lateral epicondyle (and also to the radial collateral ligament, annular ligament, the supinator fossa, and the crest of the ulna ) |
| Flexor carpi radialis muscle | medial epicondyle |
| Flexor carpi ulnaris muscle, its humeral head | medial epicondyle |
| Flexor digitorum superficialis muscle, its humeroulnar head | medial epicondyle (and also to the ulnar collateral ligament and the coronoid process of the ulna ) |
| Palmaris longus muscle | medial epicondyle |
| Pronator teres muscle | medial epicondyle (and also to the coronoid process of the ulna) |
| Latissimus dorsi muscle | intertubercular groove, floor of the |
| Pectoralis major muscle | intertubercular groove, lateral lip |
| Teres major muscle | intertubercular groove, medial lip |
| Infraspinatus muscle | greater tubercle, middle facet |
| Supraspinatus muscle | greater tubercle, superior facet |
| Teres minor muscle | greater tubercle, inferior facet |
| Subscapularis muscle | lesser tubercle |
| Anconeus muscle | olecranon, lateral surface (and also to the superior part of the posterior surface of the ulna) |
| Brachioradialis muscle | lateral supracondylar ridge, proximal two-thirds of the |
| Coracobrachialis muscle | medial humerus, middle third of the |
| Extensor carpi radialis longus muscle | lateral supracondylar ridge |
| Deltoid muscle | deltoid tuberosity |
Actions
★
Deltoid has a variety of actions on the top of the arm.
★
Pectoralis major,
teres major and
latissimus dorsi, which all insert at the ''intertubercular groove'' of the humerus, adduct and medially rotate the humerus.
★
Biceps brachii,
brachialis,
coracobrachialis, and
brachioradialis (which attaches very distally), act to flex the elbow. ''Biceps'' however does not attach to the humerus.
★
Triceps brachii and
anconeus extend the elbow, and attach to the posterior side of the humerus.
Clinical considerations
The most common type of shoulder (
glenohumeral joint) dislocation is an anterior or inferior dislocation of the humerus. This dislocation has the potential to injure the
axillary nerve or
axillary artery. Signs and symptoms of this dislocation are: a loss of the normal contour of the shoulder, a depression under the acromion that you can feel, and being able to feel the head of humerus in the
axilla (armpit).
Popular culture
Since 'Humerus' is the
homonym of '
humorous', it is sometimes referred to in popular culture as 'the funny bone'. However, the funny bone is actually not a bone, but refers to the ulnar nerve situated at the end of the humerus near the elbow. Accidentally hitting the funny bone can cause a tingling sensation (or 'funny' feeling), and possibly a significant amount of pain.
Additional images