Anatomy of the Upper Extremity: A Dissection Course 2025

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Cadaveric dissection is the traditional way of teaching anatomy after theoretical lessons and discussions on the atlas images(2). Medical students gain knowledge and strengthen theoretical data through visualization of real anatomic structures.
Elevate your surgical skills and knowledge with this immersive cadaveric upper limb TO course. This intensive programme is designed for orthopaedic surgeons, fellows and registrars seeking to refine their approach to complex upper extremity injuries guided by expert instructors.
The upper extremity or arm is a functional unit of the upper body. It consists of three sections: the upper arm, forearm, and hand. It extends from the shoulder joint to the fingers and contains 30 bones. It also consists of many nerves, blood vessels (arteries and veins), and muscles.
The course focusses on the dissection of human specimen under the supervision of staff members of the department. In addition, students can study specimen prepared by their fellow students, preparations made for demonstrations and images generated by modern imaging technologies such as X-ray images, MRI and CT scans.
The course is structured around 5 sessions of dissection performed by faculty, all senior hand surgeons. Each session consists of prosection of fresh cadaver limbs and a running tutorial demonstrating the anatomy, including applied anatomy, surgical application, incisions, approaches etc.
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There are 5 areas covered in the upper limb: The axilla, cubital fossa, extensor tendon compartments, carpal tunnel and anatomical snuffbox.
The normal range of motion is 70 to 90 degrees. The internal rotation muscles are the subscapularis, pectoralis major, latissimus dorsi, teres major, and the anterior aspect of the deltoid. External rotation - Defined as rotation away from the midline along a vertical axis. The normal range of motion is 90 degrees.
The Cadaver training will provide practitioners with a better general understanding of facial anatomy and the ability to optimise treatments in the safest way possible. Practitioners will also gain confidence in managing complications should they arise in their future practice. What will the day cover? Live dissection.

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