Pectoral region Flashcards
4 muscles of pectoral region
Pectoralis major
Pectoralis minor
Serratus anterior
Subclavius
Pectoralis major 2 heads
Sternal and Clavicular
Pectoralis major origin
Clavicular: anterior surface medial clavicle
Sternocostal: anterior surface of sternum, upper 6 costal cartilages and aponeurosis of external oblique muscle
Pectoralis major insertions
Intertubercular sulcus of humerus
Function and innervation of pectoralis major
Adducts and medially rotates (clavicular head flex upper limb)
Innervation: lateral and medial pectoral nerve
Pectoralis minor origin and insertion
Origin: 3rd-5th rib
Insert: Coracoid process of scapula
Pectoralis minor function and innervation
Stabilises scapula (pulls it anteroinferiorly against thoracic wall) Innervation: Medial pectoral nerve
Serratus anterior origin and insertion
Lateral aspects of ribs 1-8
Insertion: medial border of scapula
Serratus anterior function
Protracts scapula
Rotates medial scapula anteroinferiorly (gelnhoid cavity rotates upwards)
Upper limb can abduct above 90 degrees
Serratus anterior innervation
Long thoracic nerve
Clinical relevance long thoracic nerve
Innervates serratus anterior which holds scapula against ribs
If damaged, winging of scapula occurs (medial border protrudes posteriorly)
Can be seen when pushing against wall
How can long thoracic nerve be damaged?
Trauma (to neck/shoulder)
Heavy backpack
Surgical trauma during mastectomy (stripped with axillary nodes)
What occurs when there is high metabolic demand (eg hyperventilating)?
Pectoralis major, minor and serratus anterior can act as accessory muscles of respiration by elevating ribs and allowing increased volume of thoracic cavity
Coracobrachialis importance
Identify brachial plexus
Coracobracialis O and I
O: Coracoid process scapula
I: medial side of humoral shaft (same level as deltoid tubercle)