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Question 1
Correct
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A 25-year-old footballer develops pain and stiffness in his thigh. A diagnosis of iliopsoas syndrome is made.
Iliacus is innervated by which of the following nerves? Select ONE answer only.Your Answer: Femoral nerve
Explanation:Iliacus is innervated by the femoral nerve.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 2
Incorrect
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A 30-year-old man presents with piriformis syndrome pain, tingling, and numbness in her buttocks. He noted that the pain gets worse upon sitting down. He was seen by a physiotherapist and a diagnosis of piriformis syndrome was made.
Which of the following nerves becomes irritated in piriformis syndrome?Your Answer: Nerve to piriformis
Correct Answer: Sciatic nerve
Explanation:Piriformis syndrome is a clinical condition of sciatic nerve entrapment at the level of the ischial tuberosity. While there are multiple factors potentially contributing to piriformis syndrome, the clinical presentation is fairly consistent, with patients often reporting pain in the gluteal/buttock region that may shoot, burn or ache down the back of the leg (i.e. sciatic-like pain). In addition, numbness in the buttocks and tingling sensations along the distribution of the sciatic nerve is not uncommon.
The sciatic nerve runs just adjacent to the piriformis muscle, which functions as an external rotator of the hip. Hence, whenever the piriformis muscle is irritated or inflamed, it also affects the sciatic nerve, which then results in sciatica-like pain.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 3
Incorrect
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A 26-year-old athlete presents with buttock pain after tearing his gluteus maximus muscle.
Which of the following is NOT an action of the gluteus maximus muscle? Select ONE answer only.Your Answer: Raising the trunk from a flexed position
Correct Answer: Hip abduction
Explanation:Gluteus maximus is the main extensor muscle of the hip and assists with lateral rotation of the thigh at the hip joint. It also acts as a hip adductor, steadies the thigh, and assists in raising the trunk from a flexed position.
Gluteus maximus is innervated by the inferior gluteal nerve. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 4
Incorrect
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A 36-year-old man presented to the emergency room after an incident of slipping and falling onto his back and left hip. Upon physical examination, it was noted that he has pain on hip extension, but normal hip abduction.
Which of the following muscles was most likely injured in this case?Your Answer: Superior gemellus
Correct Answer: Gluteus maximus
Explanation:The primary hip extensors are the gluteus maximus and the hamstrings such as the long head of the biceps femoris, the semitendinosus, and the semimembranosus. The extensor head of the adductor magnus is also considered a primary hip extensor.
The hip abductor muscle group is located on the lateral thigh. The primary hip abductor muscles include the gluteus medius, gluteus minimus, and tensor fasciae latae.
The secondary hip abductors include the piriformis, sartorius, and superior fibres of the gluteus maximus. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 5
Correct
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Which of the following ligaments supports the head of the talus?
Your Answer: Spring ligament
Explanation:The spring-ligament complex is a significant medial arch stabilizer.
The two important functions of this ligament include promoting the stability of the talonavicular joint by acting as a support for the talus head and by acting as a static support to maintain the medial longitudinal arch.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 6
Correct
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Which of the following nerves is most important for eversion of the foot:
Your Answer: Superficial fibular nerve
Explanation:Eversion of the foot is primarily produced by the fibularis longus and fibularis brevis, both innervated by the superficial fibular nerve. The fibularis tertius, innervated by the deep fibular nerve, also assists in this action.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 7
Incorrect
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A 38-year-old woman presented to the emergency room after an incident of slipping and falling onto her back and left hip. Upon physical examination, it was noted that she has pain on hip flexion, but normal hip adduction. Which of the following muscles was most likely injured in this case?
Your Answer: Pectineus
Correct Answer: Sartorius
Explanation:The hip adductors are a group of five muscles located in the medial compartment of the thigh. These muscles are the adductor longus, adductor brevis, adductor magnus, gracilis, and pectineus.
The hip flexors consist of 5 key muscles that contribute to hip flexion: iliacus, psoas, pectineus, rectus femoris, and sartorius.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 8
Correct
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The most important nerve for plantar flexion of the foot at the ankle joint is:
Your Answer: Tibial nerve
Explanation:Muscles of the posterior compartment of the leg, innervated by the tibial nerve, perform plantar flexion of the foot at the ankle joint. The fibularis longus (innervated by the superficial fibular nerve) assists in plantar flexion but is not the most important.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 9
Incorrect
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Regarding the lumbar plexus, which of the following is a direct muscular branch?
Your Answer: Nerve to obturator internus
Correct Answer: Nerve to quadratus lumborum
Explanation:The lumbar plexus gives rise to several branches which supply various muscles and regions of the posterior abdominal wall and lower limb. These branches include the Iliohypogastric, ilioinguinal, genitofemoral, lateral femoral cutaneous, femoral and obturator nerves.
In addition, the lumbar plexus gives off muscular branches from its roots, a branch to the lumbosacral trunk and occasionally an accessory obturator nerve.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 10
Correct
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A 55 year old man presents to ED complaining of leg weakness. Your colleague has examined the patient and suspects femoral nerve palsy. Which of the following clinical features would you LEAST expect to see on examination of this patient:
Your Answer: Weakness of hip extension
Explanation:Damage to the femoral nerve results in weakness of hip flexion and knee extension and loss of sensation over the anterior thigh and the anteromedial knee, medial leg and medial foot.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 11
Incorrect
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You are giving a teaching session to a group of final year medical students regarding lower limb neurology. Which of the following clinical features would be expected in an obturator nerve palsy:
Your Answer: Weakness of hip abduction
Correct Answer: Weakness of hip adduction
Explanation:Damage to the obturator nerve results in weak adduction of the hip with lateral swinging of the limb during walking due to unopposed abduction.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 12
Incorrect
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A patient suffers from an injury and as a consequence, is unable to externally rotate his femur when his hip is extended. You suspect a nerve injury to the obturator internus muscle. Which of the following nerves innervate the obturator internus muscle?
Your Answer: Obturator nerve
Correct Answer: Obturator internus nerve
Explanation:The obturator internus is innervated by the obturator internus nerve (L5–S2), a branch of sacral plexus.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 13
Incorrect
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A 22 year old professional athlete sustains an inversion injury to her left ankle during the 800m. Which of the following ligaments is most likely injured:
Your Answer: Posterior talofibular ligament
Correct Answer: Anterior talofibular ligament
Explanation:Inversion injuries at the ankle in plantarflexion (such as when wearing high heels) are common, and typically result in damage to the lateral collateral ligament of the ankle, made up of the anterior talofibular, the calcaneofibular and the posterior talofibular ligaments. The anterior talofibular and the calcaneofibular ligaments are most commonly injured, and the posterior talofibular ligament rarely. The spring ligament supports the head of the talus, the deltoid ligament supports the medial aspect of the ankle joint, and the long and short plantar ligaments are involved in maintaining the lateral longitudinal arch of the foot.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 14
Incorrect
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Compression of this nerve can cause weakness in the left leg while walking and thigh adduction weakness at the hip joint.
Your Answer: Superior gluteal nerve
Correct Answer: Obturator nerve
Explanation:The obturator nerve is a sensory and motor nerve that emerges from the lumbar plexus and innervates the thigh.
This nerve supplies motor innervation to the medial compartment of the thigh, making it necessary for thigh adduction.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 15
Incorrect
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Which of the following nerves supplies innervation to the extensor hallucis longus?
Your Answer: Tibial nerve
Correct Answer: Deep peroneal nerve
Explanation:Extensor hallucis longus is innervated by the deep fibular nerve (root value L5 and S1).
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 16
Incorrect
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Given a patient with dislocation of the patella, which muscle is the most important to address during rehabilitation to prevent recurrent dislocation?
Your Answer: Rectus femoris
Correct Answer: Vastus medialis
Explanation:Patellar dislocation is a disabling musculoskeletal disorder which predominantly affects younger people who are engaged in multidirectional physically active pursuits. Conservative (non-operative) treatment is the treatment of choice for FTPD (first time patellar dislocation). Quadriceps strengthening exercises are considered one of the principal management aims for people following FTPD. A United Kingdom (UK) survey of physiotherapy practice has shown that quadriceps strengthening and specific-vastus medialis obliquus (VMO) or distal vastus medialis (VM) muscle strengthening or recruitment exercises were two of the most frequently used interventions for this population. Specific VM exercises are favoured in some quarters based on the assumption that the VM has an important role in preventing excessive lateral patellar translation.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 17
Correct
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A 27-year-old athlete presents with buttock pain after tearing his gluteus maximus muscle.
In which of the following nerves is the gluteus maximus muscle innervated by?Your Answer: Inferior gluteal nerve
Explanation:The gluteal muscles are a group of muscles that make up the buttock area. These muscles include: gluteus maximus, gluteus medius. and gluteus minimus.
The gluteus maximus is the most superficial as well as largest of the three muscles and makes up most of the shape and form of the buttock and hip area. It is a thick, fleshy muscle with a quadrangular shape. It is a large muscle and plays a prominent role in the maintenance of keeping the upper body erect.
The innervation of the gluteus maximus muscle is from the inferior gluteal nerve. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 18
Correct
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A patient suffers an injury to the nerve that innervates piriformis.
The piriformis muscle is innervated by which of the following nerves? Select ONE answer only.Your Answer: Nerve to piriformis
Explanation:Piriformis is innervated by the nerve to piriformis, which is a direct branch from the sacral plexus (S1 and S2).
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 19
Correct
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Regarding an avulsion fracture, a sudden contraction of which muscle may lead to fracture of the head of the fibula?
Your Answer: Biceps femoris
Explanation:Avulsion fractures of the fibular head are rare and are so-called the arcuate signal. The “arcuate signal” is used to describe an avulsed bone fragment related to the insertion site of the tendon of the biceps femoris associated with the arcuate complex, which consists of the fabellofibular, popliteofibular, and arcuate ligaments. Such lesions are typically observed in direct trauma to the knee with excessive varus and internal rotation forces or indirect trauma with the same direction of the force.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 20
Correct
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Which of the following muscles laterally rotates the hip?
Your Answer: Gluteus maximus
Explanation:External (lateral) rotation at the hip joint is produced by the gluteus maximus together with a group of 6 small muscles (lateral rotators): piriformis, obturator internus, superior and inferior gemelli, quadratus femoris and obturator externus.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 21
Correct
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Question 22
Correct
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A 25-year-old athlete suffers an injury to the nerve that innervates the gluteus minimus muscle.
Which of the following nerves innervates the gluteus minimus muscle?Your Answer: Superior gluteal nerve
Explanation:Gluteus minimus is the smallest muscle of the glutei. It is located just beneath the gluteus medius muscle. Gluteus minimus predominantly acts as a hip stabilizer and abductor of the hip.
The superior gluteal nerve innervates the gluteus minimus. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 23
Incorrect
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A patient suffers from an injury to his hip and thigh. As a consequence of his injury, the nerve that was damaged innervates the obturator externus muscle.
In which of the following nerves is the obturator externus muscle innervated by?Your Answer: Anterior branch of the obturator nerve
Correct Answer: Posterior branch of the obturator nerve
Explanation:The obturator externus is innervated by the posterior branch of the obturator nerve, L2-L4.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 24
Correct
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Which of the following nerves has been damaged when a patient presents with a foot drop?
Your Answer: Common peroneal nerve
Explanation:The common peroneal nerve often referred to as the common fibular nerve, is a major nerve that innervates the lower extremity. It is one of the two major branches off the sciatic nerve and receives fibres from the posterior divisions of L4 through S2 nerve roots. The common peroneal nerve separates from the sciatic nerve in the distal posterior thigh proximal to the popliteal fossa. After branching off of the sciatic nerve, it continues down the thigh, running posteroinferior to the biceps femoris muscle, and crosses laterally to the head of the lateral gastrocnemius muscle through the posterior intermuscular septum. The nerve then curves around the fibular neck before dividing into two branches, the superficial peroneal nerve (SPN) and the deep peroneal nerve (DPN). The common peroneal nerve does not have any motor innervation before dividing; however, it provides sensory innervation to the lateral leg via the lateral sural nerve.
The superficial peroneal nerve innervates the lateral compartment of the leg, and the deep peroneal nerve innervates the anterior compartment of the leg and the dorsum of the foot. These two nerves are essential in the eversion of the foot and dorsiflexion of the foot, respectively. The superficial and deep peroneal nerves provide both motor and sensory innervation.
The most common presentation with common peroneal nerve injury or palsy is acute foot drop, although symptoms may be progressive and can include sensory loss or pain. Weakness in foot eversion may occur if the superficial peroneal nerve component is involved.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 25
Incorrect
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Which of the following muscles is most responsible for thigh extension at the hip joint?
Your Answer: Hamstrings, gluteus medius and gluteus minimus
Correct Answer: Hamstrings and gluteus maximus
Explanation:For hip extension, the gluteus maximus and hamstring muscles work together. To compensate for gluteus maximus weakness, the hamstring frequently acts as the primary hip extensor.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 26
Correct
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A 25-year-old guy who has had a knee-high plaster cast on his left leg for the past 5 weeks arrives at the emergency department complaining of numbness on the dorsum of his left foot and an inability to dorsiflex or evert his foot. You know that his symptoms are due to fibular nerve compression. Where is the fibular nerve located?
Your Answer: Neck of fibula
Explanation:Dorsiflexion and eversion of the foot are innervated by the deep fibular nerve and the superficial fibular nerve, respectively.
The common fibular nerve runs obliquely downward along the lateral border of the popliteal fossa (medial to the biceps femoris) before branching at the neck of the fibula.
Thus, it is prone to being affected during an impact injury or fracture to the bone or leg. Casts that are placed too high can also compress the fibular nerve.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 27
Correct
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Which of the following nerves innervates the adductor brevis?
Your Answer: Obturator nerve
Explanation:Like the majority of the thigh adductors, adductor brevis is innervated by the obturator nerve. Obturator nerve is derived from the lumbar plexus (anterior branches of spinal nerves L2-L4).
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 28
Correct
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A 32-year-old woman suffers a deep wound to her thigh while she was climbing over a barbed wire fence. As a consequence of her injury, the nerve that was severed innervates the gracilis muscle.
In which of the following nerves is the gracilis muscle innervated by?Your Answer: Anterior branch of the obturator nerve
Explanation:The gracilis muscles is innervated by the anterior branch of the obturator nerve (L2-L4).
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 29
Incorrect
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The most important nerves for inversion of the foot are:
Your Answer: Tibial and obturator nerve
Correct Answer: Tibial and deep fibular nerve
Explanation:Inversion of the foot is achieved by the tibialis anterior which is innervated by the deep fibular nerves, and the tibialis posterior muscles which is innervated by the tibial nerve respectively.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 30
Incorrect
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A 30-year-old man suffers from an open femoral shaft fracture after being involved in a road traffic accident. As a consequence of his injury, the nerve that was damaged innervates the popliteus muscle.
In which of the following nerves is the popliteus muscle innervated by?Your Answer: Deep peroneal nerve
Correct Answer: Tibial nerve
Explanation:The popliteus muscle is innervated by the tibial nerve (L4, 5 and S1).
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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