| Literature DB >> 34785621 |
Adil Asghar1, Rakesh Kumar Jha1, Apurba Patra2, Binita Chaudhary1, Brijendra Singh3.
Abstract
The Gantzer's muscle is often present in the flexor compartment of the forearm. It lies underneath flexor digitorum superficialis and compresses the anterior interosseous nerve. Furthermore, this muscle frequently bestows an accessory muscle of flexor pollicis longus or flexor digitorum profundus, or sometimes together. The current meta-analysis aims to compute the prevalence of subtypes of Gantzer's muscle. Major electronic databases (PubMed, Scopus, Google Scholar, etc.) were searched for title and abstract. After removing the duplicate citations, the titles/abstracts were shortlisted with the help of inclusion and exclusion criteria. The shortlisted titles/abstracts were downloaded or collected from the library. The data of all subtypes of Gantzer's muscle were pooled from shortlisted published manuscripts for meta-analysis. The pooled estimate of other anatomical characteristics was also observed. A total of 59 cadaveric studies of sample size 5,903 were evaluated for pooled prevalence of flexor pollicis longus (accessory head). Similarly, the authors evaluated 14 studies of 1,627 upper limbs for flexor digitorum profundus (accessory head). The unit of analysis was per 100 upper limbs. The Pooled prevalence of accessory muscle of flexor pollicis longus and flexor digitorum profundus were 48% (95% CI, 44%-52%) and 17% (95% CI, 13%-21%), respectively. The Gantzer's muscle is present in 2/3rd of the upper limbs. Accessory head of flexor pollicis longus is almost three times more common than the accessory head of flexor digitorum profundus. A classification of Gantzer's muscle is needed to reduce the ignorance of these variants.Entities:
Keywords: Cadaver; Forearm; Hand; Prevalence; Skeletal muscle
Year: 2022 PMID: 34785621 PMCID: PMC8968234 DOI: 10.5115/acb.21.141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anat Cell Biol ISSN: 2093-3665
Fig. 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flow diagram of search strategy for Gantzer’s muscle.
Study characteristics of Gantzer’s muscle
| Reference | Year | Prevalence (%) | 95% confidence interval | ahFPL/ahFDP | No. and ethnicity of sample | Risk of bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adachi [ | 1910 | 63 | 54–70 | 84 | 134 Asian Mongoloid | Unclear |
| Afroze et al. [ | 2020 | 24 | 14–38 | 12 | 50 Asian Caucasian | High |
| al-Qattan [ | 1996 | 52 | 33–70 | 13 | 25 Asian Caucasian | Low |
| Bagoji et al. [ | 2017 | 29 | 19–42 | 17 | 58 Asian Caucasian | Moderate |
| Bajpe et al. [ | 2015 | 24 | 14–38 | 12 | 50 Asian Caucasian | High |
| Ballesteros et al. [ | 2019 | 32 | 24–42 | 34 | 106 South American | Low |
| Bando [ | 1956 | 64 | 59–69 | 217 | 340 Asian Mongoloid | Unclear |
| Bangarayya et al. [ | 2018 | 40 | 24–58 | 12 | 30 Asian Caucasian | Moderate |
| Bilecenoglu et al. [ | 2005 | 20 | 9–38 | 6 | 30 Asian Caucasian | Low |
| Burute and Vatsalaswamy [ | 2017 | 36 | 29–44 | 56 | 156 Asian Caucasian | High |
| Caetano et al. [ | 2015 | 68 | 57–77 | 54 | 80 South American | Low |
| Chakravarthi et al. [ | 2014 | 72 | 59–83 | 39 | 54 Asian Caucasian | Moderate |
| Dubois de Monto-Marin et al. [ | 2021 | 11 | 4–26 | 4 | 36 European Caucasian | Moderate |
| Dellon and Mackinnon [ | 1987 | 33 | 20–48 | 14 | 43 North American | Low |
| Desai et al. [ | 2017 | 58 | 46–70 | 35 | 60 Asian Caucasian | High |
| Dolderer et al. [ | 2011 | 26 | 11–50 | 5 | 19 European Caucasian | Low |
| Dykes and Anson [ | 1944 | 53 | 45–61 | 80 | 150 North American | Moderate |
| El Domiaty et al. [ | 2008 | 62 | 47–75 | 26 | 42 African | Low |
| Gunnal et al. [ | 2013 | 51 | 44–58 | 92 | 180 Asian Caucasian | Moderate |
| Hemmady et al. [ | 1993 | 67 | 53–78 | 36 | 54 Asian Caucasian | Low |
| Herrold et al. [ | 2020 | 55 | 49–60 | 148 | 271 South American | High |
| Inoue [ | 1934 | 71 | 61–79 | 71 | 100 Asian Mongoloid | Unclear |
| Jones et al. [ | 1997 | 45 | 34–56 | 36 | 80 European Caucasian | Low |
| Kara et al. [ | 2012 | 38 | 26–52 | 20 | 52 Asian Caucasian | Low |
| Kara et al. [ | 2012 | 32 | 23–43 | 29 | 90 Asian Caucasian | Low |
| Khade et al. [ | 2020 | 53 | 36–70 | 16 | 30 Asian Caucasian | Moderate |
| Kida [ | 1988 | 62 | 54–70 | 82 | 132 Asian Mongoloid | Low |
| Kudo and Obata [ | 1957 | 55 | 48–61 | 118 | 216 Asian Mongoloid | Low |
| Kumari et al. [ | 2017 | 42 | 29–56 | 20 | 48 Asian Caucasian | Moderate |
| Le Double and Berry [ | 1897 | 33 | 28–39 | 100 | 300 European Caucasian | Moderate |
| Loth [ | 1912 | 89 | 78–95 | 50 | 56 African | Low |
| Mahakkanukrauh et al. [ | 2004 | 62 | 56–68 | 149 | 240 Asian Mongoloid | Moderate |
| Malhotra et al. [ | 1982 | 54 | 48–60 | 130 | 240 North American | Moderate |
| Mangini [ | 1960 | 74 | 63–82 | 56 | 76 North American | Low |
| Matsunaga et al. [ | 2000 | 35 | 27–43 | 50 | 144 Asian Mongoloid | Low |
| Mohammed [ | 2018 | 64 | 52–76 | 38 | 59 African | Low |
| Mori [ | 1964 | 50 | 43–57 | 103 | 205 Asian Mongoloid | Low |
| Mustafa et al. [ | 2016 | 45 | 25–66 | 9 | 20 Asian Caucasian | Moderate |
| Oh et al. [ | 2000 | 67 | 55–77 | 48 | 72 Asian Mongoloid | Moderate |
| Oliveira et al. [ | 2021 | 50 | 34–66 | 17 | 34 South American | Low |
| Pai et al. [ | 2008 | 46 | 38–55 | 58 | 126 Asian Caucasian | Low |
| Philip and Dakshayani [ | 2018 | 22 | 13–36 | 11 | 50 Asian Caucasian | Moderate |
| Ravi Prasanna et al. [ | 2019 | 36 | 24–50 | 18 | 50 Asian Caucasian | High |
| Riveros et al. [ | 2015 | 10 | 3–27 | 3 | 30 South American | Moderate |
| Sano [ | 1931 | 70 | 38–90 | 7 | 10 Asian Mongoloid | Unclear |
| Sato [ | 1969 | 25 | 22–29 | 151 | 604 Asian Mongoloid | Moderate |
| Sekizawa [ | 1960 | 54 | 43–64 | 45 | 84 Asian Mongoloid | Unclear |
| Sharma et al. [ | 2008 | 40 | 28–53 | 24 | 60 Asian Caucasian | Moderate |
| Shayo et al. [ | 2015 | 42 | 30–54 | 26 | 62 Asian Caucasian | Low |
| Shirali et al. [ | 1998 | 55 | 42–67 | 33 | 60 North American | Moderate |
| Tamang et al. [ | 2013 | 25 | 16–37 | 15 | 60 Asian Caucasian | High |
| Tomizawa [ | 1986 | 54 | 35–73 | 13 | 24 Asian Mongoloid | Moderate |
| Tubbs et al. [ | 2006 | 20 | 8–43 | 4 | 20 North American | Low |
| Uyaroglu et al. [ | 2006 | 52 | 39–65 | 27 | 52 Asian Caucasian | Moderate |
| Wagenseil [ | 1936 | 73 | 65–79 | 103 | 142 Asian Mongoloid | Moderate |
| Wagenseil [ | 1936 | 55 | 47–62 | 82 | 150 European Caucasian | Moderate |
| Wood [ | 1868 | 61 | 49–72 | 44 | 72 European Caucasian | Low |
| Yang et al. [ | 2017 | 48 | 37–59 | 35 | 73 Asian Mongoloid | Moderate |
| Yu et al. [ | 2018 | 58 | 31–82 | 7 | 12 Asian Mongoloid | Moderate |
| Pooled weighted prevalence | 48 | 44–52 | 2,844 | 5,903 random effect model | ||
| Bando [ | 1956 | 25 | 21–30 | 86 | 340 Asian Mongoloid | Moderate |
| El Domiaty et al. [ | 2008 | 14 | 7–28 | 6 | 42 African | Unclear |
| Inoue [ | 1934 | 29 | 21–39 | 29 | 100 Asian Mongoloid | Unclear |
| Jones et al. [ | 1997 | 18 | 11–27 | 14 | 80 European Caucasian | Low |
| Kudo and Obata [ | 1957 | 20 | 16–26 | 44 | 216 Asian Mongoloid | Low |
| Mohammed [ | 2018 | 5 | 2–15 | 3 | 59 African | Low |
| Mangini [ | 1960 | 3 | 1–10 | 2 | 76 North American | Low |
| Oliveira et al. [ | 2021 | 3 | 0–18 | 1 | 34 South American | low |
| Pai et al. [ | 2008 | 14 | 9–22 | 18 | 126 Asian Caucasians | Low |
| Philip and Dakshayani [ | 2018 | 22 | 13–36 | 11 | 50 Asian Caucasians | Moderate |
| Sano [ | 1930 | 23 | 14–36 | 13 | 56 Asian Mongoloid | Unclear |
| Sekizawa [ | 1960 | 21 | 14–31 | 18 | 84 Asian Mongoloid | Unclear |
| Wagenseil [ | 1936 | 26 | 20–34 | 37 | 142 Asian Mongoloid | Moderate |
| Wagenseil [ | 1936 | 10 | 6–16 | 15 | 150 European Caucasian | Moderate |
| Wood [ | 1868 | 7 | 3–16 | 5 | 72 European Caucasian | Low |
| Pooled weighted prevalence | 17 | 13–21 | 302 | 1,627 random effect model |
ahFPL, accessory head of flexor pollicis longus; ahFDP, accessory head of flexor digitorum profundus. a)Secondary reference was used because the data collected from secondary reference due to inaccessibility of original manuscript. b)ahFDP.
Fig. 2Pooled weighted prevalence of accessory head of flexor pollicis longus variant. ES, effect size (log-odds ratio); CI, confidence interval; W, weight of study (inverse variance); N, sample size. a)Secondary reference was used because the data collected from secondary reference due to inaccessibility of original manuscript.
Fig. 3Pooled weighted prevalence of accessory head of flexor digitorum profundus variant. ES, effect size (log-odds ratio); CI, confidence interval; W, weight of study (inverse variance); N, sample size. a)Secondary reference was used because the data collected from secondary reference due to inaccessibility of original manuscript.
Characteristics of variants of Gantzer’s muscle: laterality, sex, anatomical and morphological distribution
| Characteristic | ahFPL | ahFDP | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P (%) | 95% CI (%) | P (%) | 95% CI (%) | ||
| Laterality | |||||
| Right | 49 | 46–53 | 9 | 5–14 | |
| Left | 45 | 42–49 | 10 | 6–15 | |
| Unilateral | 47 | 43–51 | 8 | 4–16 | |
| Bilateral | 53 | 49–57 | 10 | 6–16 | |
| Sex | |||||
| Male | 38 | 32–44 | 12 | 7–18 | |
| Female | 13 | 8–18 | 23 | 14–36 | |
| Origin | |||||
| Flexor digitorum superficialis | 15 | 13–17 | 74 | 65–82 | |
| CP | 24 | 22–26 | 6 | 3–13 | |
| ME | 37 | 35–40 | 15 | 9–23 | |
| Antebrachial fascia | 4 | 3–5 | NA | NA | |
| Dual origin (CP & ME) | 8 | 7–10 | NA | NA | |
| Pronator teres | NA | NA | 4 | 2–10 | |
| Innervation | |||||
| Anterior interosseous nerve | 66.7 | 64.1–69.3 | 55.6 | 46–65 | |
| Median nerve | 33.2 | 30.6–35.9 | 44.4 | 36–55 | |
| Ulnar nerve | 0.1 | 0.1–0.2 | NA | NA | |
| Morphology | |||||
| Fusiform | 72 | 69–75 | NA | NA | |
| Voluminous | 2 | 1–4 | NA | NA | |
| Slender | 10 | 8–13 | NA | NA | |
| Voluminous & fusiform | 1 | 0–1 | NA | NA | |
| Triangular | 5 | 3–6 | NA | NA | |
| Strap-like | 4 | 3–6 | NA | NA | |
| Papillary like | 6 | 4–8 | NA | NA | |
ahFPL, accessory head of flexor pollicis longus; ahFDP, accessory head of flexor digitorum profundus; P, prevalence; CI, confidence interval; CP, coronoid process of ulna; ME, medial epicondyle of humerus; NA, not applicable.
Characteristics of variants of Gantzer’s muscle: insertion of both variants
| ahFPL | ahFDP | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Insertion | P (%) | 95% CI (%) | Insertion | P (%) | 95% CI (%) | |
| Muscle | 61 | 52–70 | Index finger tendon | 47 | 37–57 | |
| Tendon | 13 | 7–20 | Middle tendon | 20 | 13–29 | |
| Proximal third of forearm | 71 | 66–76 | Ring finger tendon | 0 | 0–7 | |
| Middle third of forearm | 23 | 18–27 | Little finger tendon | 10 | 5–18 | |
| Lower third of forearm | 6 | 3–8 | Middle & ring finger tendon | 20 | 13–29 | |
| Middle, ring & little finger tendon | 3 | 1–9 | ||||
ahFPL, accessory head of flexor pollicis longus; ahFDP, accessory head of flexor digitorum profundus; P, prevalence; CI, confidence interval.
Fig. 4Classification of Gantzer’s muscle. ME, medial epicondyle of humerus; CP, coronoid process of ulna; FDS, flexor digitorum superficialis; ahFPL, accessory head of flexor pollicis longus; ahFDP, accessory head of flexor digitorum profundus.