Extensor digitorum longus muscle

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Extensor digitorum longus muscle
The mucous sheaths of the tendons around the ankle. Lateral aspect. (Extensor dig. longus labeled at upper right.)
Latin musculus extensor digitorum longus
Gray's subject #129 481
Origin: Lateral Condyle of tibia and superior ¾ of interosseous membrane
Insertion: Middle and Distal phalanges of lateral four digits
Artery: anterior tibial artery
Nerve: peroneal nerve
Action: extension of toes and ankle
Antagonist: Flexor digitorum longus, Flexor digitorum brevis
Dorlands/Elsevier m_22/12548912

The Extensor digitorum longus is a pennate muscle, situated at the lateral part of the front of the leg.

Contents

It arises from the lateral condyle of the fibula; from the upper three-fourths of the anterior surface of the body of the fibula; from the upper part of the interosseous membrane; from the deep surface of the fascia; and from the intermuscular septa between it and the Tibialis anterior on the medial, and the Peronæi on the lateral side.

Between it and the Tibialis anterior are the upper portions of the anterior tibial vessels and deep peroneal nerve.

The tendon passes under the transverse and cruciate crural ligaments in company with the Peronæus tertius, and divides into four slips, which run forward on the dorsum of the foot, and are inserted into the second and third phalanges of the four lesser toes.

The tendons to the second, third, and fourth toes are each joined, opposite the metatarsophalangeal articulation, on the lateral side by a tendon of the Extensor digitorum brevis.

The tendons are inserted in the following manner: each receives a fibrous expansion from the Interossei and Lumbricalis, and then spreads out into a broad aponeurosis, which covers the dorsal surface of the first phalanx: this aponeurosis, at the articulation of the first with the second phalanx, divides into three slips—an intermediate, which is inserted into the base of the second phalanx; and two collateral slips, which, after uniting on the dorsal surface of the second phalanx, are continued onward, to be inserted into the base of the third phalanx.

This muscle varies considerably in the modes of origin and the arrangement of its various tendons.

The tendons to the second and fifth toes may be found doubled, or extra slips are given off from one or more tendons to their corresponding metatarsal bones, or to the short extensor, or to one of the interosseous muscles.

A slip to the great toe from the innermost tendon has been found.

This article was originally based on an entry from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy. As such, some of the information contained herein may be outdated. Please edit the article if this is the case, and feel free to remove this notice when it is no longer relevant.

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