{{short description|Bone of the tarsus of the foot}} {{Infobox bone | Name = Calcaneus | Latin = calcaneus, calcaneum, os calcis | Image = Subtalar Joint.svg | Caption = The calcaneus forms the bony part of the [[heel]]. It forms a joint with the [[talus bone]], the [[subtalar joint]]. | Image2 = Calcaneus animation01.gif | Caption2 = Bones of the [[foot]], with the calcaneus shown in red | Origins = | Insertions = | Articulations = }} The '''calcaneus''' ({{IPAc-en|k|ae|l|'|k|ei|n|i|@|s}}; from the Latin ''calcaneus'' or ''calcaneum'', meaning heel;<ref>Mosby’s Medical, Nursing and Allied Health Dictionary, Fourth Edition, Mosby-Year Book Inc., 1994, p. 242</ref> {{plural form}}: '''calcanei''' or '''calcanea''') or '''heel bone''' is a [[bone]] of the [[Tarsus (skeleton)|tarsus]] of the [[foot]] which constitutes the [[heel]]. In humans, it attaches several muscles and the plantar fascia. In some animals, it is the point of the [[hock (anatomy)|hock]].
==Structure== In humans, the calcaneus is the largest of the [[tarsal bone]]s and the largest bone of the foot. Its long axis is pointed forwards and laterally.<ref name="Ryan 2011"/> The [[talus bone]], calcaneus, and [[navicular bone]] are considered the proximal row of tarsal bones.<ref name="Platzer-216" /> In the calcaneus, several important structures can be distinguished:<ref name="Platzer-216">Platzer (2004), p 216</ref>
There is a large '''calcaneal tuberosity''' located posteriorly on plantar surface with medial and lateral tubercles on its surface. Besides, there is another peroneal tubercle on its lateral surface.<ref name="Ryan 2011">{{cite book |last1=Ryan |first1=Stephanie |title=Anatomy for diagnostic imaging |date=2011 |publisher=Elsevier Ltd |isbn=9780702029714 |page=284 |edition=Third |chapter=Chapter 8}}</ref> On its lower edge on either side are its lateral and medial processes (serving as the origins of the [[Abductor hallucis muscle|abductor hallucis]] and [[Abductor digiti minimi muscle (foot)|abductor digiti minimi]]). The [[Achilles tendon]] is inserted into a roughened area on its superior side and the [[cuboid bone]] articulates with its anterior side.{{citation needed|date=April 2022}} On its superior side there are three articular surfaces for the articulation with the [[talus bone]].<ref name="Ryan 2011"/> Between these superior articulations and the equivalents on the talus is the '''tarsal sinus''' (a canal occupied by the [[interosseous talocalcaneal ligament]]).{{citation needed|date=April 2022}} At the upper and forepart of the medial surface of the calcaneus, below the middle talar facet, there is a horizontal eminence, the '''sustentaculum tali''' ("shelf of the [[Talus bone|talus]]").<ref name="Ryan 2011"/> The sustentaculum tali gives attachment to the [[Plantar calcaneonavicular ligament|plantar calcaneonavicular (spring) ligament]], tibiocalcaneal ligament, and medial talocalcaneal ligament. This eminence is concave above, and articulates with the middle calcaneal articular surface of the talus; below, it is grooved for the tendon of the [[flexor hallucis longus]]; its anterior margin gives attachment to the plantar calcaneonavicular ligament, and its medial margin to a part of the [[deltoid ligament]] of the [[ankle-joint]].
On the lateral side is commonly a tubercle called the '''fibular trochlea''' (or peroneal tubercle). This is a raised projection located between the tendons of the [[fibularis longus]] and [[fibularis brevis|brevis]]. It separates the two oblique grooves of the lateral surface of the calcaneus (for the tendons of the fibularis muscles).
Its chief anatomical significance is as a point of divergence of the previously common pathway shared by the distal tendons of fibularis longus and fibularis brevis ''en route'' to their distinct respective attachment sites.<ref name="Platzer-216" />
The calcaneus is part of two joints: the proximal intertarsal joint and the [[talocalcaneal joint]]. The point of the calcaneus is covered by the calcanean [[Bursa (anatomy)|bursa]].
===Development=== In the calcaneus, an [[ossification center]] develops during the [[Prenatal development#Week 4|4th]]–[[Prenatal development#Week 7|7th week]] of [[Prenatal development|fetal development]]. <ref name="Platzer-216" />
==Function== Three muscles insert on the calcaneus: the [[Gastrocnemius muscle|gastrocnemius]], [[Soleus muscle|soleus]], and [[Plantaris muscle|plantaris]]. These muscles are part of the [[posterior compartment of the leg]] and aid in walking, running and jumping. Their specific functions include [[Anatomical terms of motion|plantarflexion]] of the foot, flexion of the knee, and steadying the leg on the ankle during standing. The calcaneus also serves as origin for several short muscles that run along the sole of the foot and control the toes.
{|align=right |- | [[File:Gray268.png|thumb|130px|Muscle attachments (seen from above)]] || [[File:Gray269.png|thumb|130px|Muscle attachments (seen from below)]] |} {| class="wikitable" ! Muscle || Direction || Attachment<ref name=Bojsen>{{cite book |last=Bojsen-Møller |first=Finn |last2=Simonsen |first2=Erik B. |last3=Tranum-Jensen |first3=Jørgen| year=2001 |title=Bevægeapparatets anatomi |edition=12th |language=da |trans-title=Anatomy of the Locomotive Apparatus | isbn =978-87-628-0307-7|pages=364–367 }}<!--|access-date=February 13, 2012--></ref> |- | [[Gastrocnemius muscle|Gastrocnemius]] || Insertion || Calcaneal tuberosity through the Achilles tendon |- | [[Soleus muscle|Soleus]] || Insertion || Calcaneal tuberosity through the Achilles tendon |- | [[Plantaris muscle|Plantaris]] || Insertion || Calcaneal tuberosity through the Achilles tendon |- | [[Extensor digitorum brevis muscle|Extensor digitorum brevis]] || Origin || [[Anatomical terms of location#Dorsal and ventral|Dorsal side]] of calcaneus |- | [[Abductor hallucis muscle|Abductor hallucis]] || Origin || Medial process of calcaneal tuberosity |- | [[Extensor hallucis brevis muscle|Extensor hallucis brevis]] || Origin || [[Anatomical terms of location#Dorsal and ventral|Dorsal side]] of calcaneus |- | [[Abductor digiti minimi muscle of foot|Abductor digiti minimi]] || Origin || Lateral and medial processes of calcaneal tuberosity |- | [[Flexor digitorum brevis muscle|Flexor digitorum brevis]] || Origin || Medial process of calcaneal tuberosity |- | [[Quadratus plantae muscle|Quadratus plantae]] || Origin || Lateral process of calcaneal tuberosity |- |}
==Clinical significance== [[File:Calcaneus Fracture.jpg|thumbnail|Calcaneus fracture X-ray]] {{See also|Calcaneal fracture}} Normally the [[tibia]] sits vertically above the calcaneus (''pes rectus''). If the calcaneal axis between these two bones is turned medially the foot is in an everted position (''pes valgus''), and if it is turned laterally the foot is in an inverted position (''pes varus'').<ref>''Thieme Atlas of Anatomy'' (2006), p 410</ref> * [[Calcaneal fracture]], also known as ''lover's fracture'' and ''Don Juan fracture''
==Disease==
The talar shelf is typically involved in subtalar or talocalcaneal [[tarsal coalition]].
== See also == {{Anatomy-terms}} * [[Calcar]] * [[Bohler's angle]] * [[Sanders classification]]
== Additional images == <gallery> File:LateralAspectOfRightCalcaneus.jpg|Calcaneus of the right foot; lateral view. (After Testut's Anatomy.) File:MedialViewOfRightCalcaneus.jpg|Calcaneus of the right foot; medial view. (After Testut's Anatomy.) File:SuperiorAspectOfRightCalcaneus.jpg|Calcaneus of the right foot; superior view. (After Testut's Anatomy.) File:InferiorViewOfCalcaneus.png|Calcaneus of the right foot; inferior view. (After Testut's Anatomy.) File:PosteriorAspectOfRightCalcaneus.jpg|Calcaneus of the right root; posterior view. (After Testut's Anatomy.) File:AnteriorAspectOfRightCalcaneus.jpg|Calcaneus of the right foot; anterior view. (After Charpy.) File:AnimatedRightCalcaneus.gif|Right calcaneus. Animation. File:PlantarAspectOfHeelBone.jpg|Labeled illustration depicting the inferior aspect of a right calcaneus. (After Charpy.) File:Ospied-en.svg|Bones of foot File:Calcaneus.jpg|3D rendering of a left calcaneus derived from CT scan data. The calcaneus is white, and the other bones of the foot and ankle are clear to illustrate the position and relationship of the calcaneus to the other tarsal bones. </gallery>
== Notes == {{reflist}}
== References == * {{cite book | first = Werner | last = Platzer | title = Color Atlas of Human Anatomy, Vol. 1: Locomotor System | publisher = [[Thieme Medical Publishers|Thieme]] | isbn = 3-13-533305-1<!---US: 1-58890-159-9---> | year = 2004 | edition = 5th }} * {{cite book | title = Thieme Atlas of Anatomy: General Anatomy and Musculoskeletal System | publisher = Thieme | year = 2006 | isbn = 1-58890-419-9 }} * {{cite book|last=Saladin|first=Kenneth|title=Anatomy and Physiology, The Unity of Form and Function|year=2012|publisher=McGraw Hill|isbn=978-0-07-337825-1|pages=270–271}} * {{cite web|title=Calcaneus (Heel Bone) Fractures|url=http://orthoinfo.aaos.org/topic.cfm?topic=A00524|work=American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons|access-date=13 Dec 2012}}
==External links== {{Commons category|Calcaneus}} * {{NormanAnatomy|lljoints}} ({{NormanAnatomyFig|posterioranklejoint}}) * [http://www.embodi3d.com/files/file/79-left-calcaneus-heel-bone/ 3D printable calcaneus model], free download in STL format (Embodi3D.com) {{Bones of lower extremity}}
{{Authority control}}
[[Category:Bones of the lower limb]] [[Category:Vertebrate anatomy]] [[Category:Bones of the foot]] [[Category:Tarsal bones]]