Parts of the Lower Extremity of the Body

The lower extremity refers to the part of the body from the hip to the toes. The lower extremity includes the hip, knee, and ankle joints, and the bones of the thigh, leg, and foot.

Female runner on track against a white background
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Many people refer to the lower extremity as the leg. In fact, the leg is the part of the body between the knee and ankle joints. The proper way to describe the lower limb is the lower extremity. This may seem like a minor detail. However, when medical information is transferred between hospitals, doctors, and other medical professionals, it is important to use the same language. In anatomic terms, the body is described as follows.

Lower Extremity

  • Thigh: the segment between the hip joint and the knee joint
  • Leg: the segment between the knee joint and the ankle joint

Upper Extremity

  • Arm: the segment between the shoulder joint and the elbow joint
  • Forearm: the segment between the elbow joint and the wrist joint

Parts of the Lower Extremity

Now that you know that the leg isn't the same as the entire lower extremity, here are the different parts:

  • Blood Supply: The lower extremity is supplied by the femoral artery. The blood returns via superficial saphenous veins and deep veins that include the femoral, popliteal, anterior tibial, posterior tibial, and fibular vein. Deep vein thrombosis is a dangerous condition when clots form in these veins.
  • Nerves: The lower limb nerves branch from the lumbosacral plexus. The sciatic nerve runs from the pelvis down the back of each leg and divides into a peroneal and tibial nerve to control the legs and feet. Damage to the peroneal nerve can cause foot drop, a loss of sensation to the top of the foot and inability to lift the foot. Compression of the spinal nerves can cause pain to radiate along the sciatic nerve, known as sciatica.
  • Bones and Joints: The lower limb is attached via the hip joint to the pelvic bones. The femur, or thigh bone, extends down to the knee joint and articulates with the patella. The bones of the leg include the larger tibia (shin bone) and the smaller fibula. They connect via the ankle joint with the tarsal bones, which include the talus, the calcaneus (heel bone), cuboid, navicular, and the cuneiform bones. These connect via the metatarsophalangeal joints to the five metatarsal bones of the foot, which in turn connect to the phalanges of the toes, which have interphalangeal joints. Fractures of the bones and injuries to the joints of the lower extremity are common. Knee and hip replacements are often done when the joints are degraded by osteoarthritis.
  • Muscles: The muscles of the lower limb include the strongest and longest ones of the body, as they must be to power walking and standing upright. These muscles move the thigh and leg and control the foot. They include the gluteus maximus, gluteus medius, iliopsoas, adductor muscles, sartorius, and gracilis of the hip. The thigh muscles include the quadriceps in front and the hamstring muscles in the back. The calf muscles include the gastrocnemius and soleus. The Achilles tendon is a prominent cord attaching to the heel bone and is the largest tendon in the body.
6 Sources
Verywell Health uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
  1. Anderson BW, Bordoni B. Anatomy, appendicular skeleton. StatPearls.

  2. Molina CS, Faulk JB. Lower extremity amputation. StatPearls.

  3. Maduri P, Akhondi H. Upper limb amputation. StatPearls.

  4. Waheed SM, Hotwagner DT. Deep vein thrombosis (DVT). StatPearls.

  5. Lezak B, Massel DH, Varacallo M. Peroneal (fibular) nerve injury. StatPearls.

  6. Wong M, Kiel J. Anatomy, bony pelvis and lower limb, Achilles tendon. StatPearls.

Cluett

By Jonathan Cluett, MD
Jonathan Cluett, MD, is board-certified in orthopedic surgery. He served as assistant team physician to Chivas USA (Major League Soccer) and the United States men's and women's national soccer teams.