(Auto-translated text.) |
|||
| (5 dazwischenliegende Versionen von 2 Benutzern werden nicht angezeigt) | |||
| Zeile 1: | Zeile 1: | ||
<languages /> | <languages /> | ||
| − | + | Wherever [[Sehnen/en|tendons]] or muscles glide and overcome a bone edge or a bone protrusion, there is a bursa. A bursa contains in its interior a clear, viscous and thread-pulling liquid ([[Synovia/en|Synovia]]). | |
| − | + | Imagine a balloon half filled with water and knotted. It's on the table and you put your hand on it. Now you can move your hand back and forth a certain distance, whereby the balloon with its support does not slip, but remains in place. They create a flexing motion. | |
| − | + | That's how a bursa works. Usually it has grown together on one side with the adjacent tissue. The ″Walk″ page is designed to ensure trouble-free movement of the tendons and prevents reduced blood circulation due to the pressure exerted. | |
| + | |||
| + | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synovial_bursa | ||
Wherever tendons or muscles glide and overcome a bone edge or a bone protrusion, there is a bursa. A bursa contains in its interior a clear, viscous and thread-pulling liquid (Synovia).
Imagine a balloon half filled with water and knotted. It's on the table and you put your hand on it. Now you can move your hand back and forth a certain distance, whereby the balloon with its support does not slip, but remains in place. They create a flexing motion.
That's how a bursa works. Usually it has grown together on one side with the adjacent tissue. The ″Walk″ page is designed to ensure trouble-free movement of the tendons and prevents reduced blood circulation due to the pressure exerted.