Lumbosacral Plexus Flashcards
contrast upper and lower limb rotation
- Upper limbs rotate laterally 90*
- Flexor faces anteriorly
- Lower limbs rotate medially 180*
- Flexor at joints below hip face posteriorly
- Twisted appearance of the lumbar dermatomes due to limb rotation during embryologic development
What is the lumbar plexus and lumbosacral plexus?
What are the spinal segments?
Two major plexi that contribute to innervation of the lower limb:
- The lumbar plexus
- L2, L3, and L4 ventral rami will split into anterior and posterior divisions (like the three trunks of the brachial plexus)
- 2 major nerves arise from the lumbar plexus to innervate the lower limb: the femoral nerve and the obturator nerve
-
Lumbosacral plexus
- S2, S3
- The combined lumbar and lumbosacral plexi contain ventral rami from L2 through S3; L2 and L3 tend to innervate muscles that act more at the hip, whereas S2 and S3 tend to innervate muscles in the foot.
- Also nerves from torso block - iliohypogastric and lateral femoral cutaneous
What 2 major terminal nerves arise from the lumbar plexus,
and what do they innervate?
- The femoral nerve is composed of posterior division fibers, and innervates the anterior compartment of the thigh
- Posterior division fibers from the plexus end up in anterior position in the thigh due to the rotation.
- The obturator nerve is composed of anterior division fibers, and innervates the medial compartment of the thigh (again, the apparent discrepancy is due to rotation).
- The sciatic nerve is actually the common fibular nerve (aka common peroneal) + tibular nerve
- Common fibular = posterior divisions of L4-S2
- Tibular = anterior divisions of L4-S3
proximal to distal gradient
- Similar to the brachial plexus, there is a proximal-to-distal gradient of innervation.
- The combined lumbar and lumbosacral plexi contain ventral rami from L2 through S3
- L2 and L3 tend to innervate muscles that act more at the hip
- Whereas S2 and S3 (lumbosacral) tend to innervate muscles in the foot
where do the femoral nerve and obturator nerve exit from?
- The femoral nerve exits the abdominopelvic cavity by passing under the inguinal ligament, along with the femoral artery and vein.
- The obturator nerve exits the pelvic cavity through the obturator foramen
Femoral nerve:
- Fiber type?
- Spinal cord segments?
- Myotome?
- Dermatome?
- Posterior division fibers
- L2, L3, L4 fibers –> act more proximally, at hip and knee
- Innervates the anterior compartment of the thigh due to lower limb rotation.
- There are 3 major muscles in the anterior thigh – the pectineus, sartorius and quadriceps femoris
- Sartorius muscle, a flexor of the thigh at the hip and a flexor of the leg at the knee. It also causes external rotation of the thigh.
- Quadriceps muscles (rectus femoris, vastus lateralis, vastus intermedius, and vastus medialis). These muscles cause extension of the leg at the knee; the rectus femoris also crosses the hip joint and is a flexor of the thigh at the hip.
- Pectineus - a flexor and adductor of the thigh at the hip.
- There are 3 major muscles in the anterior thigh – the pectineus, sartorius and quadriceps femoris
- Dermatome = anterior thigh, medial leg
- The dermatome of the femoral nerve = the skin of the anterior to anteromedial thigh.
- As the femoral nerve reaches the inferior aspect of the thigh, it continues as a cutaneous-only nerve, the saphenous nerve, which provides cutaneous innervate to the anteromedial leg.
- (Note the parallelism to the musculocutaneous nerve of the upper limb, which becomes the lateral cutaneous nerve!)
sartorius muscle:
- What is it innervated by?
- What actions does it do, where?
- Innervated by femoral nerve (posterior fibers of L2-L4)
- 3 actions:
- Flexor of the thigh at the hip
- Flexor of the leg at the knee
- External rotation of the thigh
anterior thigh - what are the 3 major muscles?
What are they innervated by?
- There are 3 major muscles in the anterior thigh – the pectineus, sartorius and quadriceps femoris
- All innervated by the femoral nerve
- Sartorius muscle = a flexor of the thigh at the hip and a flexor of the leg at the knee. It also causes external rotation of the thigh.
- Quadriceps muscles = rectus femoris, vastus lateralis, vastus intermedius, and vastus medialis. These muscles cause extension of the leg at the knee; the rectus femoris also crosses the hip joint and is a flexor of the thigh at the hip.
- Pectineus = a flexor and adductor of the thigh at the hip.
quadriceps:
What are the 4 muscles?
Innervation?
Action?
Quads =
- Rectus femoris
- Vastus lateralis
- Vastus intermedius
- Vastus medialis
- All innervated by femoral nerve (L2-L4)
- All cause extension of the leg at the knee
- The rectus femoris also crosses the hip joint and is a flexor of the thigh at the hip
obturator nerve
- Fiber type?
- Spinal cord segments?
- Myotome?
- Dermatome?
- Anterior division fibers, L2-L4 (act proximally at hip and knee)
- Innervates the medial compartment of the thigh due to lower limb rotation.
- The medial compartment consists of three adductors: the adductor brevis, the adductor longus, and the adductor magnus.
- All adductors of the thigh at the hip. The adductor magnus also acts similar to a hamstring muscle in that it can extend the thigh at the hip and flex the leg at the knee.
- The medial compartment consists of three adductors: the adductor brevis, the adductor longus, and the adductor magnus.
- Also innervates the obturator externus, an adductor and lateral rotator of the thigh at the hip, as well as the gracilis, which acts similarly to the adductor magnus (an adductor with a secondary hamstring-like function).
- Dermatome = a small ovoid area on the inferomedial thigh
medial thigh muscles
What are the 3 muscles, what do they do?
Innervation?
- Medial thigh is innervated by obturator nerve
- The medial compartment of thigh contains the hip adductor muscles, the gracilis and the obturator externus. All adductors.
- The medial compartment consists of three adductors:
- adductor brevis
- adductor longus
- adductor magnus.
- These 3 muscles are all adductors of the thigh at the hip.
- The adductor magnus also can extend the thigh at the hip and flex the leg at the knee
What are the 2 muscles that the obturator nerve innervates
that don’t have “adductor” in name?
- The obturator nerve also innervates:
- obturator externus – adductor and lateral rotator of the thigh at the hip
- gracilis – acts similarly to the adductor magnus, as an adductor with a secondary hamstring-like function: can extend the thigh at the hip and flex the leg at the knee
Sciatic nerve
- Part of what plexus?
- Why is it a misnomer?
- Spinal segments?
- Anterior and posterior divisions?
- Innervation?
- lumbosacral plexus (L4-S3)
- misnomer, bc actually two different nerves that happen to ride within the same connective tissue sheath.
- The posterior divisions of L4 through S2 come together to form a common fibular nerve.
- Innervates anterior and lateral leg
- The anterior divisions of L4 through S3 come together to form the tibial nerve.
- Innervates posterior thigh and leg
- Thus, the sciatic nerve truly represents the common fibular and tibial nerves running together from their origin in the pelvis until they divide from each other at the superior edge of the popliteal fossa (the “knee pit”).
- Sciatic nerve exits just inferior to the piriformis muscle, gluteal region
lumbosacral plexus
- spinal segments?
- Nerves?
- Exit point?
- L4, L5, S1, S2, S3
- Innervates lower limb via sciatic nerve, which is actually:
-
Common fibular nerve - posterior fibers, for anterior and lateral leg
- Branches into deep and superficial
- Tibular nerve - anterior fibers, for posterior thigh and leg
-
Common fibular nerve - posterior fibers, for anterior and lateral leg
- Lumbosacral plexus exits the pelvic cavity through the greater sciatic foramen
- An opening in the posterior pelvis bounded by the ilium (superior and anterior), sacrotuberous ligament (posteromedial), and sacrospinous ligament (inferior)
Where does the sciatic nerve split into the tibial nerve and common fibular nerve?
- At the popliteal fossa (pit of the knee)
- The tibial nerve continues straight down (anterior divisions for posterior leg and thigh)
- Whereas the common fibular nerve swings laterally to pass over the neck of the fibula (posterior divisions for anterior and lateral leg)
tibial nerve
- Fibers?
- Spinal cord segments?
- Myotome?
- Dermatome?
- The tibial nerve contains anterior division fibers, but innervates the posterior compartment of the thigh due to lower limb rotation.
- L4 through S3 fibers, which act throughout the length of the lower limb.
- The posterior compartment of the thigh consists of the hamstring muscles:
- All of the true hamstrings (those that cross both the hip and knee joints) are innervated by the tibial nerve, and cause extension of the thigh at the hip and flexion of the leg at the knee. These include the semitendinosus, semimembranosus, and the long head of the biceps femoris.
- The short head of the biceps femoris (not a true hamstring) is innervated by the common fibular nerve.
- Also responsible for plantar flexion (foot on the gas pedal) because innervates
- Need plantar flexion in order to stand on toes
- At foot, tibial nerve divides into lateral plantar nerve and medial plantar nerve
- Myotome: posterolateral leg, and plantar foot
What are the true hamstrings?
-
True hamstrings cross both the hip and knee joints
- innervated by the tibial nerve
- cause extension of the thigh at the hip and flexion of the leg at the knee.
- These include the semitendinosus, semimembranosus, and the long head of the biceps femoris.
- The short head of the biceps femoris (not a true hamstring bc only crosses knee) is innervated by the common fibular nerve. It flexes the knee.