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Alternate meanings: Hand (disambiguation)


The hand ( med./ lat.: manus) is a portion of the arm or anterior limb of a human or other primate, at where the appendage terminates. This part of the limb is especially used in grasping and holding. The left hand is the mirror image of the right hand.

1 What constitutes a hand?

Although many mammals and other animals have grasping appendage s similar in form to a hand, these are scientifically not considered to be so, and have other varying names, including paws. Using the term hand is merely a scientific usage of anthropomorphization, to distinguish the terminations of the front paws from the hind ones. The only true hands appear in the mammalian order of primates. Hands must also feature opposable thumbs, as described later in the text.

2 Structure of the hand

The hand consists of a broad palm (metacarpus) with five digits, attached to the forearm by a joint called the wrist (carpus).

2.1 Digits

2.1.1 The four fingers

The four fingers on the hand are located at the outermost edge of the palm. These four digits can be folded over the palm, this allows for the holding of objects, and furthermore the grasping of small objects. Each finger, starting with the one closest to the thumb, has a colloquial name to distinguish it from the others:

2.1.2 The thumb

The thumb (connected to the trapeziumThe trapezium is a bone in the human hand. It was also previously referred to as the greater multangular bone or the os multangulum majus . This bone is a carpal bone, in the section commonly referred to as the wrist. It articulates distally with the firs) is located on one the sides, parallel to the arm. The thumb can be easily rotated 90º, on a perpendicular level compared to the palm, unlike the fingers which can only be rotated approximately 45º. A reliable way of identifying true hands is from the presence of opposable thumbs. Opposable thumbs are identified by the ability to be brought opposite to the fingers.


2.2 Bones

The human hand has at least 27 bones: the carpusIn human anatomy, the carpal bones are the bones of the human wrist. There are eight of them altogether, and they can be thought of as forming two rows of four. Proximal Row Scaphoid (or navicular this bone, with the lunate, articulates with the radius of or wrist account for 8; the metacarpusThe metacarpus is the intermediate part of the hand skeleton that is located between the fingers distally and the carpus which forms the connection to the forearm. It consists of five cylindrical bones which are numbered from the radial to the ulnar side or palm contains 5; the remaining 14 are digital bones.

2.2.1 Bones of the wrist

The wrist has eight bones, arranged in two rows of four. These bones fit into a shallow socket formed by the bones of the forearm.

2.2.2 Bones of the palm

The palm has 5 bones, one to each of the 5 digits.

2.2.3 Digital bones

Also called phalanges, hands contain 14 of them; 2 in the thumb, and 3 in each of the four fingers (called distal phalanx, carrying the nail, middle phalanx and proximal phalanx. The thumb has no middle phalanx).



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