Jump to content

Thumb: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
ClueBot (talk | contribs)
m Reverting possible vandalism by 153.26.178.60 to version by Axeman89. False positive? Report it. Thanks, ClueBot. (752904) (Bot)
Tag: repeating characters
Line 63: Line 63:
===Hitchhiker's thumb===
===Hitchhiker's thumb===
[[Image:Hitchhiker's Thumbs.jpg|thumb|Hitchhiker's thumbs {{deletable image-caption}}]]
[[Image:Hitchhiker's Thumbs.jpg|thumb|Hitchhiker's thumbs {{deletable image-caption}}]]
A [[Dominance relationship|recessive]] [[Mendelian inheritance|congenital condition]] known as "hitchhiker's thumb" exists, if the thumb, when extended (as in a "[[Thumbs Up|thumbs-up]]") can extend backwards toward the nail and outwards. People who do not have this condition are able to extend the thumb straight out with little backward bending. Neither condition appears to have any ill-effect on the thumb's function. While most people have either "hitchhiker's thumb" on both thumbs or neither, in some people the condition only presents itself on one thumb.
A [[Dominance relationship|recessive]] [[Mendelian inheritance|congenital condition]] known as "hitchhiker's thumb" exists, if the thumb, when extended (as in a "[[Thumbs Up|thumbs-up]]") can extend backwards toward the nail and outwards. People who do not have this condition are able to extend the thumb straight out with little backward bending. Neither condition appears to have any ill-effect on the thumb's function. While most people have either "hitchhiker's thumb" on both thumbs or neither, in some people the condition only presents itself on one thumb. '''If your have a "hitchhikers" thumb the only way to cure this is to cut your thumb off with a butter knife!!!!!!!!!!'''


== As one of five digits, and as companion to four fingers ==
== As one of five digits, and as companion to four fingers ==

Revision as of 07:32, 11 August 2009

The Thumb
The "thumbs up" gesture is a sign of approval in some cultures, but an obscene gesture in others.[1]
Details
Arteryprinceps pollicis artery
Lymphinfraclavicular lymph nodes[2]
Identifiers
Latinpollex, digitus primus, digitus I
MeSHD013933
TA98A01.1.00.053
TA2151
FMA24938
Anatomical terminology

Template:Fingers

The thumb when a person is standing in the medical anatomical position is the lateral-most digit of the hand. The Medical Latin English adjective for thumb is pollical.

Anatomy

Bones

The thumb consists of three bones:


Name Location Nerve
extensor pollicis longus forearm posterior interosseous nerve
abductor pollicis longus forearm posterior interosseous nerve
flexor pollicis longus forearm anterior interosseous nerve
extensor pollicis brevis forearm posterior interosseous nerve
abductor pollicis brevis hand median nerve
flexor pollicis brevis hand median nerve
opponens pollicis hand median nerve
adductor pollicis hand ulnar nerve (deep branch)

The extensor pollicis longus tendon and extensor pollicis brevis tendon form what is known as the anatomical snuff box (an indentation on the lateral aspect of the thumb at its base) The radial artery can be palpated anteriorly at the wrist(not in the snuffbox) In the hand, the abductor pollicis brevis, adductor pollicis, flexor pollicis brevis, and opponens pollicis form the thenar eminence.


Opposable thumbs

An animal species is said to have opposable thumbs if the thumb is capable of bending in such a way that it can touch all the other digits on the hand. Most species do not have opposable thumbs. Opposable thumbs are a signature feature of the primate family, and played a large role in the ancient humans inventing and using tools.

Hitchhiker's thumb

Hitchhiker's thumbs

This file may be deleted at any time.

A recessive congenital condition known as "hitchhiker's thumb" exists, if the thumb, when extended (as in a "thumbs-up") can extend backwards toward the nail and outwards. People who do not have this condition are able to extend the thumb straight out with little backward bending. Neither condition appears to have any ill-effect on the thumb's function. While most people have either "hitchhiker's thumb" on both thumbs or neither, in some people the condition only presents itself on one thumb. If your have a "hitchhikers" thumb the only way to cure this is to cut your thumb off with a butter knife!!!!!!!!!!

As one of five digits, and as companion to four fingers

The English word "finger" has two senses, even in the context of appendages of a single typical human hand:

  1. The four digits, not including the thumb.
  2. Any of the five digits.

Linguistically, it appears that the original sense was the broader of these two: penkwe-ros (also rendered as penqrós) was, in the inferred Proto-Indo-European language, a suffixed form of penkwe (or penqe), which has given rise to many Indo-European-family words (tens of them defined in English dictionaries) that involve or flow from concepts of fiveness.

The thumb shares the following with each of the (other) four fingers:

  • Having a skeleton of phalanges, joined by hinge-like joints that provide flexion toward the palm of the hand
  • Having a "back" surface that features hair and a nail, and a hairless palm-of-the-hand side with fingerprint ridges instead

The thumb contrasts with each of the (other) four by being the only finger that:

  • Is opposable
  • Has two phalanges rather than three
  • Has greater breadth in the distal phalanx than in the proximal phalanx
  • Is attached to such a mobile metacarpus (which produces most of the opposability)

Grips

Typical interdigital grips include the tips of thumb and second finger (forefinger/index finger) holding a pill or other small item, or thumb and sides of second and third fingers holding a pen or pencil.

Origin of the human thumb

Opposable thumbs are shared by many primates, including most simians, and some prosimians. Darwinius masillae, a transitional form between simians and prosimians, living about 47 million years ago, had opposable thumbs, providing a "precision grip" useful for climbing and gathering fruit.[3]

The evolution of the fully opposable or prehensile thumb is usually associated with Homo habilis, the forerunner of Homo sapiens.[4][5][6] This, however, is the suggested result of evolution from Homo erectus (around 1 mya) via a series of intermediate anthropoid stages, and is therefore a much more complicated link.

The most important factors leading to the habile hand (and its thumb) are:

  • the freeing of the hands from their walking requirements—still so crucial for apes today, as they have hands for feet, which in its turn was one of the consequences of the gradual pithecanthropoid and anthropoid adoption of the erect bipedal walking gait, and
  • the simultaneous development of a larger anthropoid brain in the later stages.

It is possible, though, that a more likely scenario may be that the specialized precision gripping hand (equipped with opposable thumb) of Homo habilis preceded walking, with the specialized adaptation of the spine, pelvis, and lower extremities preceding a more advanced hand. And, it is logical that a conservative, highly functional adaptation be followed by a series of more complex ones that complement it. With Homo habilis, an advanced grasping-capable hand was accompanied by facultative bipedalism, possibly implying, assuming a co-opted evolutionary relationship exists, that the latter resulted from the former as obligate bipedalism was yet to follow.[7] Walking may have been a byproduct of busy hands and not vice versa.

HACNS1 (also known as Human Accelerated Region 2) is a gene enhancer "that may have contributed to the evolution of the uniquely opposable human thumb, and possibly also modifications in the ankle or foot that allow humans to walk on two legs". Evidence to date shows that of the 110,000 gene enhancer sequences identified in the human genome, HACNS1 has undergone the most change during the evolution of humans following the split with the ancestors of chimpanzees.[8]

Importance

The opposable thumb has helped the human species develop more accurate fine motor skills. It is also thought to have directly led to the development of tools, not just in humans or their evolutionary ancestors, but other primates as well. The opposable thumb ensured that important human functions such as writing were possible.[9][10] The thumb, in conjunction with the other fingers, makes human hands and those of other species with similar hands some of the most dexterous in the world.[11]

Other animals with opposable thumbs

Many animals also have some kind of opposable thumb or toe.

Opposable thumb on rear foot of an opossum

Most birds have at least one opposable digit on the foot, in various configurations, but these are seldom called "thumbs".

References

  1. ^ Desmond Morris, Peter Collett, Peter Marsh and Marie O'Shaughnessy, 1979 Gestures: Their Origin and Meanings - The Thumb Up Webified by Bernd Wechner
  2. ^ clinicalconsiderations at The Anatomy Lesson by Wesley Norman (Georgetown University)
  3. ^ Early Primate Provides Evolution Clues, a May 19, 2009 article from ABC News
  4. ^ http://www.reference-wordsmith.com/cgi-bin/lookup.cgi?category=&where=headword&terms=Homo
  5. ^ The Evolution of the Human Species (from Evolutionary Theory Conference Summary), Esalen Center for Theory & Research
  6. ^ The NEXUS: Technology Timeline - Hominids
  7. ^ W E H Harcourt-Smith and L C Aiello feet and the evolution of human bipedal locomotion. J Anat. 2004 May, accessed 2007 November
  8. ^ HACNS1: Gene enhancer in evolution of human opposable thumb
  9. ^ http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/lessons/01/g68/lonsdorf.html Lesson Plans - Chimps, Humans, Thumbs, and Tools]National Geographic, 2006, accessed April 26, 2007
  10. ^ Damonte, Kathleen Thumbs Are Handy DigitsNational Science Teachers Association: Science & Children: The Elementary Science Classroom. February 2004, accessed April 26, 2007
  11. ^ Chaisson, Eric J. Cosmic Evolution - Epoch 6 - Biological Evolution. Tufts University. 2007, accessed April 26, 2007