| Literature DB >> 33344272 |
Felipe Assis Costa1, Josemberg da Silva Baptista1.
Abstract
The authors describe a rare unilateral muscle variation in the thoracic wall combining the pectoralis quartus and chondro-epitrochlearis muscles. A routine dissection was performed in the upper right limb of a male adult cadaver with approximately 35-50 years of age, embalmed in formalin 10%. An accessory muscle, the pectoralis quartus, was identified and was associated with a tendon that was inserted in the medial humeral epicondyle, characteristic of the chondro-epitrochlearis muscle tendon. Such variations have significant clinical relevance to orthopedics, mastology, neural and vascular surgery, and other specialties, for surgical approaches in both the axillary and brachial regions. Autopsy and Case Reports. ISSN 2236-1960.Entities:
Keywords: Anatomic Variation; Anatomy, Regional; Autopsy; Dissection
Year: 2020 PMID: 33344272 PMCID: PMC7702999 DOI: 10.4322/acr.2020.151
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autops Case Rep ISSN: 2236-1960
Figure 1Dissection of the pectoral, scapular, axillar and brachial region: 1) Deep common fibers of the pectoralis major muscle (reflected), 2) Deep horizontal fibers of the pectoralis major muscle (reflected), 3) Pectoralis minor muscle, 4) Biceps brachii (long head), 5) Coracobrachialis muscle, 6) Median nerve, 7) Belly of the biceps brachii, 8) Basilic vein. The empty arrow indicates the chondro-epitrochlearis tendon, and the asterisk (*) indicates the medial epicondyle of the humerus.