Literature DB >> 1022227

An anomalous muscle (accessory subscapularis-teres-latissimus muscle) in the axilla penetrating the brachial plexus in man.

Y Kameda.   

Abstract

An anomalous muscle passing through the brachial plexus was found in 10 cases out of 380 sides of 190 human cadavers in the dissection course. The muscle was designated as 'accessory subscapularis-teres-latissimus muscle'. This muscle arose near the lateral margin of the scapula, either from the surface of the subscapularis muscle or from the border of the quadrangular terminal tendon of the latissimus dorsi or from both of those sources when the muscle was divided into two heads. It ran obliquely upward to fuse with the insertion of the subscapularis. The largest anomaly was 2.5 cm in width and 7 cm in length. This muscle could be classified into three types on the basis of its nerve supply and its relation to the brachial plexus. The type I muscle crossed over the axillary and lower subscapular nerves, behind the radial nerve and was innervated by the lower subscapular nerves. The type II musclepenetrated the brachial plexus separating the radial nerve into two roots; the upper from the posterior division of the upper trunk and the lower from the posterior divisions of the middle and lower trunks. The type II muscle was supplied by a branch of the radial nerve, which originated always at the same level as the origin of the thoracodorsal nerve. The type III muscle passed through the further more ventrocaudal level of the plexus; in one case it divided the radial nerve into an upper root from the posterior divisions of the upper and middle trunks and a lower root from the lower trunk, and, in another case, into an upper main root from all the three trunks and a lower slender root from the lower trunk. The type III muscle was supplied by branches from the radial and in addition from the thoracodorsal nerve in one case. In four out of ten cases, the subscapular or thoracodorsal artery also passed posterior to the anomalous muscle. A discussion was made on the nature of the anomalous muscle.

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Mesh:

Year:  1976        PMID: 1022227     DOI: 10.1159/000144700

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Anat (Basel)        ISSN: 0001-5180


  4 in total

Review 1.  A panorama of radial nerve pathologies- an imaging diagnosis: a step ahead.

Authors:  Aakanksha Agarwal; Abhishek Chandra; Usha Jaipal; Narender Saini
Journal:  Insights Imaging       Date:  2018-11-05

2.  Infraglenoid Muscle as an Anatomic Variation of the Anterior Rotator Cuff.

Authors:  Gwan Bum Lee; Erica Kholinne; Jae-Man Kwak; Yucheng Sun; Adel Mohammaed Alhazmi; In-Ho Jeon
Journal:  Case Rep Surg       Date:  2019-02-10

3.  Unknown variant of the accessory subscapularis muscle?

Authors:  Nicol Zielinska; R Shane Tubbs; Marko Konschake; Łukasz Olewnik
Journal:  Anat Sci Int       Date:  2021-09-30       Impact factor: 1.741

4.  A very rare case of an accessory subscapularis muscle and its potential clinical significance.

Authors:  Nicol Zielinska; Łukasz Olewnik; Piotr Karauda; R Shane Tubbs; Michał Polguj
Journal:  Surg Radiol Anat       Date:  2020-07-12       Impact factor: 1.246

  4 in total

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