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Biceps femoris muscle

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Biceps Femoris
Posterior view of right leg. Long head of muscle highlighted in red, short head labeled in the lower part of the image
Details
Origintuberosity of the ischium, linea aspera, femur
Insertionthe head of the fibula which articulates with the back of the lateral tibial condyle
Arterydeep femoral artery, perforating arteries; long head of biceps femoris: perforating branches from profunda femoris artery
Nervelong head: tibial nerve
short head: common fibular nerve
Actionsflexes knee joint, laterally rotates knee joint (when knee is flexed), extends hip joint (long head only)
AntagonistQuadriceps muscle
Identifiers
Latinmusculus biceps femoris
TA98A04.7.02.032
TA22638
FMA22356
Anatomical terms of muscle

The biceps femoris (/ˈbsɛps ˈfɛmərɪs/) is a muscle of the thigh located to the posterior, or back. As its name implies, it has two parts, one of which (the long head) forms part of the hamstrings muscle group.

Structure

It has two heads of origin:

The two muscle heads joint together distally and unite in an intricate fashion. The fibers of the long head form a fusiform belly, which passes obliquely downward and lateralward across the sciatic nerve to end in an aponeurosis which covers the posterior surface of the muscle and receives the fibers of the short head. Inferiorly, the aponeurosis condenses to form a tendon which predominantly inserts onto the lateral side of the head of the fibula. There is a second small insertional attachment by a small tendon slip into the lateral condyle of the tibia.[1]

At its insertion the tendon divides into two portions, which embrace the fibular collateral ligament of the knee-joint. Together, this joining of tendons is commonly referred to as the conjoined tendon of the knee.[1][2]

From the posterior border of the tendon a thin expansion is given off to the fascia of the leg. The tendon of insertion of this muscle forms the lateral hamstring; the common fibular (peroneal) nerve descends along its medial border.[1]

Variations

The short head may be absent; additional heads may arise from the ischial tuberosity, the linea aspera, the medial supracondylar ridge of the femur, or from various other parts.[1] The tendon of insertion may be attached to the Iliotibial band and to retinacular fibers of the lateral joint capsule.[3]

A slip may pass to the gastrocnemius.[1]

Innervation

It is a composite muscle as the short head of the biceps femoris develops in the flexor compartment of the thigh and is thus innervated by common fibular branch of the sciatic nerve (L5, S1), while the long head is innervated by the tibial branch of the sciatic nerve (L5, S1).[4]

Blood supply

The muscle's vascular supply is derived from the anastomoses of several arteries: the perforating branches of the profunda femoris artery, the inferior gluteal artery, and the popliteal artery.[4]

Function

Both heads of the biceps femoris perform knee flexion.[5]

Since the long head originates in the pelvis it is also involved in hip extension.[5] The long head of the biceps femoris is a weaker knee flexor when the hip is extended (because of active insufficiency). For the same reason the long head is a weaker hip extender when the knee is flexed.

When the knee is semi-flexed, the biceps femoris in consequence of its oblique direction rotates the leg slightly outward.

Clinical significance

Avulsion of the biceps femoris tendon is common in sports that require explosive bending of the knee as seen in sprinting.

See also

Additional images

References

Public domain This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 478 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Gray's Anatomy". 1918. Archived from the original on 2009-12-22. Retrieved 2010-09-01.
  2. ^ Smithius, Robin; Rubin, David (August 2, 2005). "Knee - Non-Meniscal pathology". The Radiology Assistant.
  3. ^ The Adult Knee, vol. 1, ed. Callaghan, p. 70
  4. ^ a b "biceps femoris muscle (anatomy)". GPnotebook.
  5. ^ a b Origin, insertion and nerve supply of the muscle at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine

Further reading