• J Shoulder Elbow Surg · Mar 2007

    The anatomic branch pattern of the axillary nerve.

    • Aysun Uz, Nihal Apaydin, Murat Bozkurt, and Alaittin Elhan.
    • Department of Anatomy, Ankara University School of Medicine, Ankara, Turkey.
    • J Shoulder Elbow Surg. 2007 Mar 1; 16 (2): 240-4.

    AbstractThe purpose of this study is to determine the surgical anatomy and innervation pattern of the branches of the axillary nerve and discuss the clinical importance of the presented findings. We dissected 30 shoulders in 15 fixed adult cadavers under a microscope through anterior and posterior approaches. The axillary nerve was examined in 2 segments in relation to the underlying subscapularis muscle. The axillary nerve gave off no branches in the first segment in 85% of cases. When the posterior approach was used, the axillary nerve and its branches were observed to be in a triangular-shaped area. The mean distance from the posterolateral corner of the acromion to the axillary nerve and its branches was 7.8 cm. In all cases, the posterior branch of the axillary nerve gave off its first muscular branch to innervate the teres minor. The joint branch of the axillary nerve was observed to branch out in 3 different patterns. The acromial and clavicular parts of the deltoid muscle were observed to be innervated from the anterior branch of the axillary nerve in all cases. The posterior part of the deltoid muscle was observed to be innervated in 3 different patterns. The posterior part of the deltoid was innervated from the branch or branches coming only from the posterior branch in 70% of cases, from the anterior and posterior branches in 26.7% of cases, and from the anterior branch in 3.3% of cases. The findings of this study are useful for identifying each of the branches of the axillary nerve and have implications for surgeries related with selective innervation.

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