Anterior longitudinal ligament
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ligament: Anterior longitudinal ligament | ||
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Median sagittal section of two lumbar vertebræ and their ligaments. (Anterior longitudinal ligament runs vertically at center left.) | ||
Anterior atlantoöccipital membrane and atlantoaxial ligament. (Anterior longitudinal ligament runs vertically at bottom center.) | ||
Latin | ligamentum longitudinale anterius | |
Gray's | subject #72 288 | |
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Dorlands/Elsevier | l_09/12492521 |
The anterior longitudinal ligament is a ligament that runs down the anterior surface of the spine. It traverses all of the vertebral bodies and intervertebral discs.
The ligament is thick and slightly more narrow over the vertebral bodies and thinner but slightly wider over the intervertebral discs which is much less pronounced that that seen in the posterior longitudinal ligament. The ligament actually has three layers: superficial, intermediate and deep. The superficial layer traverses 3 – 4 vertebrae, the intermediate layer covers 2 – 3 and the deep layer is only between individual vertebrae.
[edit] Additional images
[edit] External links
- Atlas of anatomy at UMich back_bone25 - "Vertebral Column, Dissection, Anterior & Posterior Views"
- 1127546937 at GPnotebook
- Norman/Georgetown lesson7
- Diagram at spineuniverse.com
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