Here is a short video on the ligaments found on the acromioclavicular joint. How do you properly identify the coracoclavicular ligament?
Watch and learn the answer from today’s episode. Enjoy!
Transcript of Today’s Episode
Hello and welcome to another episode of Interactive-Biology TV where we’re making Biology fun. My name is Leslie Samuel.
In this video, I’m going to be talking about the ligaments of the acromioclavicular joint. Very short video. Let’s get right into it.
Now, you remember that the acromioclavicular joint is where the clavicle articuates with the acromion process. That’s what I’m dealing with right here. We have the clavicle and here, we have the acromion process of the scapula, and that’s where they are connecting. Once again, you can see that joint over here also the acromioclavicular joint.
That is also called the AC joint. You can call it that for short, the AC joint.
What ligaments do we have?
The first thing I want to point out is right here, we can see the superior acromioclavicular ligament. That’s connecting the clavicle directly to the acromion. And then, on the inferior aspect, we’re going to have a thinner, smaller ligament that’s the inferior acromioclavicular ligament. It’s not indicated in this picture, but just know that on the inferior aspect, we have a thinner ligament and that’s called a inferior acromioclavicular ligament.
Then, we have a set of two ligaments. Those would be the conoid ligament and the trapezoid ligament. Right here, we have the trapezoid ligament and the conoid ligament.
How can you tell the difference between the two? Well, the one that’s medial is going to be the conoid ligament. The one that’s lateral is going to be the trapezoid ligament. The trapezoid ligament has a trapezoidal shape. That’s another distinguishing characteristic.
Now, if you are in my Anatomy lab, and we were dissecting a cadaver, and I were to take a thread and tag this entire thing, you would not call it the conoid and the trapezoid ligament. You would call them the coracoclavicular ligament. Since that’s not on here, I’m just going to write it in. That’s the coracoclavicular ligament.
So, if I tag both of them, that’s the coracoclavicular ligament. If I put a string around just the lateral one, you know that’s the trapezoid ligament. If it’s just around the medial ligament, that is the conoid ligament.
Let’s do our brief review quiz.
You can see here, we have the superior acromioclavicular ligament, the inferior acromioclavicular ligament, the trapezoid ligament, the conoid ligament, and if I take them together (looks like a smiley face), that’s the coracoclavicular ligament.
That’s pretty much it for this video. If you’d like more videos like this and other resources to help make Biology fun, you know what to do, head on over to the website at interactive-biology.com. We have so many great things happening over there. So come over and join the community.
That’s all for this video. This is Leslie Samuel, and I’ll see you in the next one.
Thanks, thanks and THANKS A LOT..GOOD JOB SIR!
I am loving this more and more ea. day !