Ligament vs Syndesmosis - What's the difference?
ligament | syndesmosis |
(anatomy) A slightly movable articulation or joint where the contiguous bony surfaces are united by an interosseous ligament.
*{{quote-news, year=2009, date=August 19, author=Russell Gould, title=Storm dismisses any talk of Greg Inglis returning, work=Herald Sun
, passage=He was diagnosed with syndesmosis in his left ankle, the same injury that cost Ryan Hoffman a place in last year's grand final. }}
In anatomy|lang=en terms the difference between ligament and syndesmosis
is that ligament is (anatomy) a band of strong tissue that connects bones to other bones while syndesmosis is (anatomy) a slightly movable articulation or joint where the contiguous bony surfaces are united by an interosseous ligament.As nouns the difference between ligament and syndesmosis
is that ligament is (anatomy) a band of strong tissue that connects bones to other bones while syndesmosis is (anatomy) a slightly movable articulation or joint where the contiguous bony surfaces are united by an interosseous ligament.ligament
English
(wikipedia ligament)See also
*TendonDerived terms
* ligamental * ligamentary * ligamentoussyndesmosis
English
Noun
(syndesmoses)citation