femur bone posterior view

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Left human femur bone, posterior view, white background, 3d rendering Royalty Free Stock Photo
Left human femur bone, posterior view, close up isolated on black background, 3d rendering Royalty Free Stock Photo
Right human femur bone, posterior view, bone anatomy, black background, 3d rendering Royalty Free Stock Photo
Right human femur bone, posterior view, bone anatomy, white background, 3d rendering Royalty Free Stock Photo
Femur bone Posterior view Royalty Free Stock Photo
Detailed Posterior View of Right Leg Anatomy Illustration with Labels. Royalty Free Stock Photo
Detailed Posterior View of Right Leg Anatomy Illustration with Labels. Royalty Free Stock Photo
Femur bone Posterior view
Femur bone Posterior view Royalty Free Stock Photo
Femur bone of human on isolated white background, posterior view Royalty Free Stock Photo
Human Body Bone Joint Pains Anatomy Femur with Fibula and Tibia Posterior view Royalty Free Stock Photo
Human Body Bone Joint Pains Anatomy Femur Bones Posterior view Royalty Free Stock Photo
Posterior or back view of human male pelvis, sacrum, lumbar spine and femur bones isolated on white background 3D rendering Royalty Free Stock Photo
Anterior or front and posterior or back view of a detailed human femur bone isolated on white background with copy space 3D Royalty Free Stock Photo
Posterior or back view of a detailed human femur bone isolated on white background with copy space 3D rendering illustration. Royalty Free Stock Photo
The femur is the only bone in the thigh. The two femurs converge medially toward the knees, where they articulate with the proximal ends of the tibiae. The angle of convergence of the femora is a major factor in determining the femoral-tibial angle. In females the femora converge more than in males because the pelvic bone is wider in females. In the condition genu valgum (knock knee) the femurs converge so much that the knees touch one another. The opposite extreme is genu varum (bow-leggedness). In the general population of people without either genu valgum or genu varum, the femoral-tibial angle is about 175 degrees. The femur is the longest and, by most measures, the strongest bone in the human body. Its length on average is 26.74% of a person's height, a ratio found in both men and women and most ethnic groups with only restricted variation, and is useful in anthropology because it offers a basis for a reasonable estimate of a subject's height from an incomplete skeleton. The femur is categorised as a long bone and comprises a diaphysis (shaft or body) and two epiphyses (extremities) that articulate with adjacent bones in the hip and knee.


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