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Published in: Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy 7/2008

01-10-2008 | Original Article

Observation and measurements of long thoracic nerve: a cadaver study and clinical consideration

Authors: Jia-feng Wang, Rui-shan Dang, Dong Wang, Zhi-ying Zhang, Zhen Liu, Hui-long Huang, Ai-qun Wu, Chuan-sen Zhang, Er-yu Chen

Published in: Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy | Issue 7/2008

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Abstract

Long thoracic nerve (LTN) is an important nerve originating from cervical nerve roots. It varies a lot in origins and branches, which lead to several clinical problems, such as diagnosis, prophylaxis and treatment of LTN injury. LTN was dissected in 38 cadavers in the present study. Origin, level of union, branches, sites where nerve entered the muscle, length of nerve trunk and branches as well as transverse diameter were documented. Different derivations of LTN were observed, and C4-7, C5-7, C5 and C7, C5-7, C5-8, C6 and C7, and branch from C6 was the most important components of LTN. After evolution, LTN trunk was composed by superior and inferior trunks at scalenus muscle or the three superior slips level. Branches of LTN traveled on the surface of the six superior slips of anterior serratus muscle and then penetrated through the inferior slips without correlation between different branches. Mean length of trunk of LTN is 111.73 (30.08) mm, axis of cross section was 2.27 × 0.96 mm at the union level and 1.91 × 0.68 mm at the end branch. Each slip was innervated by 1–4 branches of LTN. The observation and measurement data described in our study presented some variations and could provide clinicians with important information on diagnosis, prophylaxis and treatment of LTN injury and pursuing more suitable muscle flaps for reconstruction operation.
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Metadata
Title
Observation and measurements of long thoracic nerve: a cadaver study and clinical consideration
Authors
Jia-feng Wang
Rui-shan Dang
Dong Wang
Zhi-ying Zhang
Zhen Liu
Hui-long Huang
Ai-qun Wu
Chuan-sen Zhang
Er-yu Chen
Publication date
01-10-2008
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy / Issue 7/2008
Print ISSN: 0930-1038
Electronic ISSN: 1279-8517
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00276-008-0368-8

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