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Leg - Cross Section
Muscles from medial to lateral:
  • Tibialis anterior
  • Extensor hallucis longus
  • Extensor digitorum longus
Neurovascular structures:
  • Anterior tibial artery and vein.
  • Deep fibular (peroneal) nerve (a branch of the common fibular nerve).
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Leg - Cross Section

Three compartments of the leg:
  • Anterior
  • Posterior
  • Lateral
Bones of the Leg & Foot
Membranes
Anterior septum
  • Extends anterolaterally from the fibula and separates the anterior and lateral compartments.
Posterior septum
Extends posterolaterally from the fibula and separates the lateral and posterior compartments.
Interosseous membrane
  • Separates the anterior and posterior compartments.
Bones of the Leg & Foot
Muscles of the anterior compartment (from medial to lateral):
Muscles of the lateral compartment (from deep to superficial):
Muscles of posterior compartment:
Deep:
Superficial:
Gastrocnemius (medial and lateral bellies join at calcaneal tendon)
End of essential/beginning of advanced
Neurovascular structures:
Anterior compartment:
Lateral compartment:
Deep posterior compartment:
Cutaneous nerves and superficial veins:
  • Great saphenous vein
  • Saphenous nerve (which is the terminal branch of the femoral nerve).
  • Small saphenous vein, which meets the great saphenous vein in the posterior leg.
  • Sural nerve, which comprises branches of the tibial and common fibular nerves (though individual variation is common).
  • Lateral sural cutaneous nerve, which is a branch of the common fibular nerve.
  • Sural communicating branch of the lateral sural cutaneous nerve lies between the lateral cutaneous and medial sural nerves.
Key points:
  • Anterior compartment muscles are innervated by the deep fibular nerve, and they primarily provide foot dorsiflexion and toe extension (in addition to eversion and inversion of the foot).
  • Lateral compartment muscles are innervated by the superficial fibular nerve, and that they provide foot plantar flexion and eversion.
  • Posterior compartment muscles are innervated by the tibial nerve, and that they provide foot and toe plantar flexion (in addition to acting at the knee and, in the case of tibialis posterior, inverting the foot).