| Your hand consists of five digits including four fingers and a thumb. The bones in your fingers are called phalanges. You have three phalanges in each finger and two in your thumb. The hand above the fingers is made up of five metacarpal bones. Several small bones make up your wrist.
Two interphalangeal (IP) joints separate the phalanges on your fingers. Your thumb has one IP joint. The IP joints allow you to bend and straighten your fingers. Your knuckles are the metacarpophalangeal (MCP) joints. The MCP joints allow your fingers and thumbs to move up and down and from side to side. The carpometacarpal (CMC) joints are located between your hand and wrist.
Your hand bones are connected together by strong ligaments. Your muscles are attached to your bones by tendons. The tendons and muscles power your hand joints and enable them to move. Your hands also contain blood vessels, nerves, connective tissues, and fat.
|