ligament


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ligament

Anatomy any one of the bands or sheets of tough fibrous connective tissue that restrict movement in joints, connect various bones or cartilages, support muscles, etc.
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

Ligament

A strong, flexible connective tissue band usually found between two bony prominences. Most ligaments are composed of dense fibrous tissue formed by parallel bundles of collagen fibers. They have a shining white appearance and are pliable, strong, and noncompliant. A second kind of ligament, composed either partly or almost entirely of yellow elastic fibers, is extensible or compliant, thereby allowing the connected bones to move apart. See Connective tissue, Joint (anatomy)

McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Bioscience. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

ligament

[′lig·ə·mənt]
(engineering)
The section of solid material in a tube sheet or shell between adjacent holes.
(histology)
A flexible, dense white fibrous connective tissue joining, and sometimes encapsulating, the articular surfaces of bones.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Ligament

 

in man, a dense band or layer of fibrous tissue that connects skeletal bones or individual organs. Ligaments usually are found near joints and perform a variety of functions, depending on the movements in the joint. Joint capsules are strengthened by reinforcing ligaments, limited in their amplitude by inhibiting ligaments, and directed in their movements by directing ligaments. In many joints, ligaments act as passive bands whose attenuation impairs static functions and alters the shape of the corresponding elements of the skeleton. The main blood vessels that nourish bone pass through some ligaments. The microscopic structure of articular ligaments consists of a variety of dense fibrous tissue whose dominant elements are bands of collagenous and elastic fibers.

The term “ligament” is often applied to anatomic formations not associated with joints, for example, the ligaments of visceral organs, which consist of fine double layers of peritoneum.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive ?
On the sagittal plane, UT, UL ligaments, volar and dorsal capsules, and part of the ulnocapitate ligament could be well evaluated, which also showed band low signal intensity [Figure 4].
For the graft preparation stage, an Achilles tendon graft was used for the PCL even though PCL is a much bigger and thicker ligament normally and a semi-tendinosus tendon was used for the ACL graft.
In addition, awareness regarding advanced surgical procedure and introduction of emerging treatments such as anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), active biosynthetic composite (ABC) will further boost the market growth.
Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed for significant changes as a result of univariate analyses for determination of the factors affecting anterior cruciate ligament injury.
Although the thickening of the flavum ligament from the radiological results is less significant, patients often have remarkable neurological complaints and deficits.
In dogs, we see this same injury, often resulting from the same sort of forces, but we also see chronic wear and tear leading to cruciate ligament tears.
In the concluding statement of their anatomic study, they state that "the deep, capsulo-osseous and superficial layers of the ITB function as an anterolateral ligament of the knee." (15) It is possible that this is the origin of the term "anterolateral ligament" in relationship to these structures.
Frequency of occurence of the discomalleolar ligament in the adult man.
The direct signs of acute ACL tears consist of a structural integrity at any plane (axial, coronal, or sagittal) in the morphology of ACL, abnormal ligament contour, and abnormal MRI signal characteristics of the ligament itself.
Most studies show that early motion allows the fibers within a ligament to assume their pre-injury state more quickly and heal without permanent damage.
Conclusions: Sacrospinous ligament excision relieved pain caused by endometriosis, so it may be applicable to the endometriosis patients with sacrospinous ligament infiltration or severe pain.
Here, we report a case of a torsioned right round ligament fibroid who presented with pelvic pain and was managed with laparoscopic surgery.