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Anterior cruciate ligament

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Anterior cruciate ligament
Diagram of the right knee. (Anterior cruciate ligament labeled at center left.)
Right knee-joint, from the front, showing interior ligaments. (Ant. cruciate labeled at center.)
Latin ligamentum cruciatum anterius
Gray's subject #93 342
Dorlands/Elsevier l_09/12492099

The anterior cruciate ligament (or ACL) is one of the four major ligaments of the knee.

It connects from a posterio-lateral (back & outside) part of the femur to an anterio-medial (front & inside) part of the tibia. These attachments allow it to resist forces pushing the tibia forward relative to the femur.

More specifically, it is attached to the depression in front of the intercondyloid eminence of the tibia, being blended with the anterior extremity of the lateral meniscus.

It passes up, backward, and laterally, and is fixed into the medial and back part of the lateral condyle of the femur.

Tearing of the ACL is a common injury among athletes.

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