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Exam (elaborations)

OCS4 – Lower Extremity Muscles, Joints, Histology & OMM | 100+ Graded Exam Questions with Answers | Joint Formation, Synovial Structure, HVLA Techniques | 2025/2026

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This document contains over 100 high-yield, pre-graded questions and verified answers from the OCS4 (Objective Clinical Skills – Week 12 Donor/Integrative/OMM) module at Medical University, intended for the 2025/2026 academic year. It offers an in-depth combination of lower extremity musculoskeletal anatomy, joint development and pathology, histological labeling, and osteopathic manipulation techniques (OMM). Questions are structured to aid recall for practicals, OSCEs, written midterms, and COMLEX-style exams. Content breakdown includes: Lower Extremity Muscle Anatomy & Innervation: Detailed origin, insertion, nerve supply, and actions of anterior, posterior, and lateral leg muscles, including tibialis anterior, extensor hallucis longus, gastrocnemius, soleus, fibularis muscles, and more. Joint Anatomy & Development: Complete review of hip, knee, ankle, and foot joints including ligaments, permitted movements, and joint types. Students are tested on knowledge of synarthrosis, amphiarthrosis, diarthrosis, and interphalangeal joint structure. Limb Embryology: Covers the development of limb buds, proximal-distal and anterior-posterior axes, and rotation of limbs, as well as joint formation from mesenchymal condensations and ossification centers. Synovial Joint Histology: Questions include identifying and labeling of articular cartilage layers (PRP zones), tide mark, calcified cartilage, subchondral bone, synovial membrane layers, and function of synoviocytes. Joint Pathologies: Compares clinical and histological differences between osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis, features of intervertebral discs, and diseases like Baker’s cyst, Lyme arthritis, and tibial vs fibular nerve syndromes. OMM Techniques for Lower Extremity: Students are guided through diagnostic criteria and treatment setups for HVLA, Muscle Energy, and Articulatory techniques applied to the tibia, fibula, ankle, and foot bones (cuboid, navicular, cuneiforms). Safety, efficacy, contraindications, and classification as direct/indirect and active/passive are addressed. Best suited for: DO and MD students preparing for integrated practicals, OSCEs, and OMM assessments PA, PT, and sports medicine students with focus on lower limb joint mechanics and palpation Students studying embryology, histology, or orthopedic pathology for preclinical board exams Keywords: lower limb anatomy, anterior leg muscles, synovial joint structure, joint development, osteoarthritis vs rheumatoid arthritis, tibial nerve, fibular nerve, interphalangeal joint, articular cartilage zones, limb rotation, HVLA techniques, OMM lower extremity, joint ossification, calcified cartilage, PRP layers, tibiotalar joint, limb embryology

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Uploaded on
December 15, 2025
Number of pages
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2025/2026
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OCS: Week 12 donor PQ, integrative,
OCS, OMM 2025/2026 Exam Questions
and Verified Answers | Already Graded
A+



PQ: Demonstrate the muscles of the anterior leg and dorsal foot and

describe their innervation - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔LEG=TEEF (4)




■tibial anterior (largest)

→lateral condyle, upper tibia, interosseous membrane>medial cuneiform,

1st MT base

→Deep fibular nerve (L4-5)

,→Dorsiflex, inversion of foot




■extensor digitorum longus

→lateral condyle tibia, upper fibula, interosseous membrane>distal

phalanges 1-4

→Deep fibular nerve (L4-5)

→Extends lateral 4 digits, dorsiflex




■extensor hallucis longus

→middle anterior fibula, interosseous membrane >base of distal hallux

→deep fibular nerve (L4-5)

→extends hallux, dorsiflex




■fibularis tertius

→lower anterior fibula, interosseous membrane>dorsal base 5th MT

→ Deep fibular nerve L4-5

, → dorsiflex, Eversion foot




==============

Dorsal foot= FL, FB (2)




■fibularis longus

→head, upper lateral fibula>base 1st MT, medial cuneiform

→ superficial fibula nerve (L5, S1, S2)

→ eversion, weak plantarflexion




■fibularis brevis

→lower lateral fibula>dorsal lateral base 5th MT (tuberosity)

→superficial fibular nerve (L5,S1,S2)

→ Eversion, weak plantarflexion




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