Nerve injuries and consequences in the upper limb Flashcards
Draw the brachial plexus.
Remember: proximal to distal on the posterior branch = upper subscapular thoracodorsal lower subscapular Proximal to distal on the medial branch = medial pectoral medial cutaneous nerve of the ARM medial cutaneous nerve of the FOREARM
Name the supraclavicular branches of the brachial plexus and state which muscles they innervate.
Dorsal scapular nerve – rhomboids + levator scapulae (+C34) Long-thoracic nerve - serratus anterior Supraclavicular nerve – supraspinatus + infraspinatus Subclavian nerve - subclavius
Name the infraclavicular branches of the brachial plexus and state the muscles that they innervate.
Lateral pectoral nerve – pectoralis major Thoracodorsal nerve – latissimus dorsi Upper subscapular nerve – subscapularis (and the lower subscapular nerve) Lower subscapular nerve – teres major Medial pectoral nerve – pectoralis minor and pectoralis major Medial cutaneous nerve of the arm – sensory to medial part of the arm Medial cutaneous nerve of the forearm – sensory to medial part of forearm
Name the terminal branches of the brachial plexus and state the muscles that they innervate.
Musculocutaneous – anterior compartment of arm Axillary – deltoid + teres minor Radial – posterior compartment of arm and forearm Median – most anterior forearm muscles + thenar muscles + lumbricals 1+2 Ulnar – flexor carpi ulnaris + ulnar half of flexor digitorum profundus + all intrinsic hand muscles (except those innervated by the median)
The cords of the brachial plexus are named because of their position relative to what important structure?
Axillary artery
Which spinal nerves make up each of the following nerves: Dorsal scapular Long Thoracic Suprascapular Subclavian Lateral Pectoral Medial Pectoral Upper Subscapular Lower Subscapular Lower Subscapular Axillary Musculocutaneous Radial Median Ulnar
Dorsal Scapular- C5 Long Thoracic- C567 Suprascapular - C56 (+C4) Subclavian - C56 (+C4) Lateral Pectoral- C567 Medial Pectoral- C8T1 Upper Subscapular- C56 Lower Subscapular- C56, C678 Axillary- C56 Musculocutaneous- C567 Radial- C5678T1 Median- C678T1 Ulnar- C8T1
Which two muscles, which start outside the hand, does the ulnar nerve innervate?
Flexor carpi ulnaris (FCU) Ulnar half of flexor digitorum profundus (FDP)
Which nerves supply the shoulder girdle muscles?
C3-C7
Which nerves supply the shoulder muscles and elbow joint flexors?
C5+C6
Which nerves supply the elbow extensors?
C7+C8
Which nerves are responsible for coarse wrist and hand movements?
C6-C8
Which nerves supply small muscles of the hand (fine movements)?
C8+T1
Describe the dermatome pattern of the skin on the posterior of the upper limb?
They are in strips going from C6-C8 from top to bottom
Describe the dermatome pattern of the skin on the anterior of the upper limb?
Same as the posterior side but there are dermatomes of C5 and T1 running down the middle with their apex at the wrist
Why is the dermatome pattern different to the cutaneous nerve pattern?
A dermatome is the area of skin innervated by a single spinal nerve A cutaneous nerve pattern is the area of skin innervated by a peripheral nerve As the peripheral nerves contain various spinal nerve root fibres, the cutaneous nerve pattern is very patchy compared to the dermatome pattern.
What is the benefit of having a brachial plexus instead of having spinal nerves directly innervating the upper limb muscles?
If a muscle group is innervated by one nerve root, damage to that nerve root will cause total loss of function of the muscle. If it is innervated by more than one nerve root then there may still be some function.
What does the axillary nerve supply and what branch of the axillary nerve is responsible for sensory innervation of the skin of the regimental badge area?
Deltoid + teres minor Superior lateral cutaneous branch
How is the axillary nerve commonly damaged?
Shoulder dislocation
What are the consequences of axillary nerve damage?
Loss of function of deltoid Anaesthesia or parasthesia of the regimental badge area