Posterior compartment of leg
Diagram of leg compartments
Dissection video of posterior compartment of leg (6 min 39 sec)
Details
Arteryposterior tibial artery
Nervetibial nerve
Identifiers
Latincompartimentum cruris posterius
TA98A04.7.01.006
TA22654
FMA45167
Anatomical terminology

The posterior compartment of the leg is one of the fascial compartments of the leg and is divided further into deep and superficial compartments.

Structure

Muscles

Superficial posterior compartment

ImageMuscleOriginInsertionInnervationMain Action !
GastrocnemiusLateral head: lateral aspect of lateral condyle of femur
Medial head: popliteal surface of femur; superior to medial condyle
Posterior surface of calcaneus via calcaneal tendonTibial nerve
(S1, S2)
Plantarflexes ankle when knee is extended; raises heel during walking; flexes leg at knee joint
PlantarisInferior end of lateral supracondylar line of femur; oblique popliteal ligamentWeakly assists gastrocnemius in plantarflexing ankle
SoleusPosterior aspect of head and superior quarter of posterior surface of fibula; soleal line and middle third of medial border of tibia; and tendinous arch extending between the bony attachmentsPlantarflexes ankle independent of position of knee; steadies leg on foot

[1]

Deep posterior compartment

ImageMuscleOriginInsertionInnervationMain Action
Flexor hallucis longus muscleInferior two-thirds of posterior surface of fibula; inferior part of interosseous membraneBase of distal phalanx of big toe (hallux)
Tibial nerve
(S1, S2)
Flexes big toe at all joints; weakly plantarflexes ankle; supports medial longitudinal arch of foot
Tibialis posterior muscleInterosseous membrane; posterior surface of tibia inferior to soleal line; posterior surface of fibulaTuberosity of navicular, cuneiform, cuboid, and sustentaculum tali of calcaneus; bases of 2nd, 3rd, and 4th metatarsals
Tibial nerve
(L4, L5)
Plantarflexes ankle; inverts foot
Flexor digitorum longus muscleMedial part of posterior surface of tibia; by a broad tendon to fibulaBases of distal phalanges of lateral four digits
Tibial nerve
(S1, S2)
Flexes lateral four digits; plantarflexes ankle; supports longitudinal arches of foot
Popliteus muscleLateral surface of lateral condyle of femur and lateral meniscusAnimation. Posterior surface of tibia, superior to soleal line
Tibial nerve
(L4, L5, S1)
Weakly flexes knee and unlocks it by rotating femur 5 deg on fixed tibia; medially rotates tibia of unplanted limb

[2] [3]

Blood supply

Posterior tibial artery

Innervation

The posterior compartment of the leg is supplied by the tibial nerve.

Function

Additional images

References

  1. Moore, Dally and Agur (2014). Moore Clinically-Oriented Anatomy, Table 5.13.I, p 597.
  2. Moore, Dally, and Agur (2014). Moore Clinically-Oriented Anatomy, Table 5.13.II, p 598.
  3. "Muscle Database - sorted by muscle location". Archived from the original on 2012-10-18. Retrieved 2014-05-10.
  4. postleg at The Anatomy Lesson by Wesley Norman (Georgetown University)
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