Transverse acetabular ligament
The transverse acetabular ligament (transverse ligament or Tunstall’s ligament) bridges the acetabular notch, creating the a foramen (through which blood vessels and nerves pass into the joint cavity). The ligament is one of the sites of attachment of the ligament of head of femur.: 789
Transverse acetabular ligament | |
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Left hip-joint, opened by removing the floor of the acetabulum from within the pelvis. (Trans. ligament labeled at center.) | |
Details | |
Identifiers | |
Latin | ligamentum transversum acetabuli |
TA98 | A03.6.07.009 |
TA2 | 1881 |
FMA | 43518 |
Anatomical terminology |
Some sources consider the transverse acetabular ligament as the part of the acetabular labrum over the acetabular notch,: 786 while another states that the labrum attaches onto the ligament.
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