| Literature DB >> 17915015 |
Suruchi Singhal1, Vani Vijay Rao, Roopa Ravindranath.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Brachial Plexus innervates the upper limb. As it is the point of formation of many nerves, variations are common. Knowledge of these is important to anatomists, radiologists, anesthesiologists and surgeons. The presence of anatomical variations of the peripheral nervous system is often used to explain unexpected clinical signs and symptoms. CASEEntities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17915015 PMCID: PMC2082021 DOI: 10.1186/1749-7221-2-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Brachial Plex Peripher Nerve Inj ISSN: 1749-7221
Figure 1Brachial Plexus of the right side of 57 year old male cadaver (In Situ). 1. Suprascapular Nerve, 2. ? Upper Subscapular Nerve, 3. Nerve to Pectoralis Minor, 4. Nerve to Deltoid, 5. Nerve to Coracobrachialis, 6 a, b, c. Lateral Roots of the Median Nerve, 7. Ulnar Nerve, 8. Musculocutaneous Nerve, 9. Median Nerve, 10. Radial nerve, 11. Nerve to Latisimus Dorsi, 12. Medial Root of the Median nerve, 13. Long Thoracic Nerve, 14. ? Lower Subscapular Nerve (Cut), 15. Axillary Nerve, LD. Latisimus Dorsi Muscle, S. Subscapularis Muscle, CRB Coracobrachialis Muscle, DM. Deltoid Muscle, AA. Axillary Artery.
Figure 2Schematic Diagram of the Brachial Plexus of the right side of 57 year old male cadaver. Shaded portions represent the posterior cord and its branches.
Branches from the Brachial Plexus
| Branches from Roots | Branches from Trunks | Branches from fusion of Trunks |
|---|---|---|
| Nerve to Subclavius (C5) | Suprascapular nerve (C5, C6) | Branch to Deltoid Muscle (C5,C6, C7) |
| Branch to deltoid (C7) | Radial nerve (C7,C8, T1) | |
| Medial root of the Median Nerve (C8,T1) | Branch to subscapularis |