View of the extensor muscles of the fingers. 1. The
common extensor, sending (2 2 2 2) tendons to each
finger; 3. the posterior annular ligament.
180. In the palm of the hand are placed additional muscles which assist the flexors of the fingers (fig. LXXXVI. 2), being chiefly useful in enabling the fingers to perform with strength and precision short and quick motions. There are especially four small and rounded muscles (fig. LXXXVI. 2), resembling the earth worm in form and size, and hence called lumbricales; but as their chief use is to assist the fingers in executing short and rapid motions, they have also received the better name of the musculi fidicinales.
1. The muscle called the square pronator; 2. muscles
seated in the palm of the hand, by which, chiefly, the
fingers execute short and rapid motions.
181. The thumb, in consequence of the comparative looseness of its ligaments, is capable of a much greater extent of motion than the fingers, and can be applied to any part of each of the fingers, to different parts of the hand, and in direct opposition to the power exerted by the whole of the fingers and hand, in the act of grasping. The muscles which enable it to perform these varied motions, and which act powerfully in almost every thing we do with the hand, form a mass of flesh at the ball of the thumb (fig. LXXXVII. 1), almost entirely surrounding it. The little finger is also provided with a distinct apparatus of muscles (fig. LXXXVII. 2), which surrounds its root, just as those of the thumb surround its ball, in order to keep it firm in opposition to the power of the thumb in the act of grasping, and in various other motions.