- Carpal bones in the wrist are the intercessors between the forearms and the metacarpals of the fingers. There are eight separate carpal bones arranged in two very irregular rows. The bottom row connects to the radius and ulna of the forearm, and it is the top row from which the fingers extend.
- The four main fingers contain metacarpal bones, which form most of the hand and extend up to the knuckles, and the phalanges, which constitute the actual fingers. These phalanges are made up of three bones. The proximal phalanx is the bone between the knuckle and the first joint of the finger. The middle phalanx extends between the first and second joint. The distal phalanx is the bone at the very tip of the finger.
- The thumb is very similar to the other fingers, except it is missing the middle phalanx entirely. Instead, it contains the metacarpal, the proximal phalanx and the distal phalanx. Because of this, the thumb has two joints instead of three. It is missing the joint between the middle and distal phalanx.
- The three joints of the main fingers are the metacarpophalangeal joint, or the knuckles, and two interphalangial joints: the distal and proximal. These joints are condyloid, meaning that the rounded surface of one bone fits into the elliptical cavity of another. The thumb also has an interphalangial joint, but it has a carpometacarpal joint on the knuckle, which affords it robust movement back and forth and side to side.
- Multiple tendons, such as the flexor digitorum superficialis and profondus, connect the bones to the muscles. There are also digital nerves and arteries between the skin and bones, where fat pads the fingers. At the end of fingers are the eponchium, or the cuticles, the thickening layer of skin that surrounds the nail plate.
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