Acetabular fossa
The acetabular fossa is the non-articular depressed region at the centre of the floor of the acetabulum. It is surrounded by the articular lunate surface.: 1368 The floor of the fossa is formed mostly by the ischium; it is rough: 1354 and thin (often to the point of transparency). The space of the fossa is continuous inferiorly with the acetabular notch.
Acetabular fossa | |
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Lateral view of the right hip bone | |
Details | |
Identifiers | |
Latin | fossa acetabuli |
TA98 | A02.5.01.004 |
TA2 | 1310 |
FMA | 17269 |
Anatomical terms of bone |
The fossa does not contain any cartilage.: 1368 It is occupied by the ligament of head of femur, and by fibroelastic adipose tissue: 1368 (within which the acetabular branch of the obturator artery ramifies: 1250 ) that is mostly lined with synovial membrane.: 1368 The acetabular "fat pad" is thought to contain abundant proprioceptive nerve endings that sense compression of the fat pad or its displacement through the acetabular notch, producing proprioceptive information.