Upper Limb 1
Upper Limb 1
Upper Limb 1
Pectoral
Pec major
Lat and medial pec nerve (C5 to T1)
Pec minor
Medial pec nerve nerve (C8 and T1)
Trap
Accessory nerve (CN XI)
Scapular retraction, elevation and depression
Lat dorsi
Thoracodorsal nerve (C6 to C8)
Serratus anterior
Long thoracic nerve (C5 to C7 - runs posterior to mid-axillary line, so chest drains are in anterior
axillary line)
Scapular protraction, depression
SCJ
Is the only attachment of upper limb to axial skeleton
ACJ
F ti i t ll t l t
Function is to allow pectoral movement
3 ligaments that strengthen the ACJ
Acromioclavicular lig
Coracoclavicular ligs
Conoid
Trapezoid
Some axial rotation and anteroposterior movement allowed
Disclocation
Shoulder joint
Bursae
Transverse humeral lig - holds tendon of long head bicep in intertubercular groove
Rotator cuff
Hold humerus in place in glenoid fossa
Subscapularis
Int rotation
subscapular nerve (C5-6)
Hand off lower back test
Supraspinatus
Abduction (first 15 degrees —> deltoid up till 90 degrees —> trapezius beyond this)
Suprascapular nerve (C5)
Empty can test at 30 degrees abduction
Infraspinatus
Ext rotation
Suprascapular nerve (C5-6)
Resist int rotation
Teres minor
Ext rotation
Axillary nerve (C5)
Resist int rotation
Supraspinatus, infraspinatus, teres minor —> insert onto GREATER tubercle humerus
p p , p ,
Subscapularis —> inserts onto LESSER tubercle humerus
Motor:
Biceps
Coracobrachialis
Brachialis
Axillary
Motor
Teres minor (ext rotation shoulder)
Deltoids
Injury:
Regimental patch
Runs posterior around humerus
shoulder dislocation, fractured humeral neck —> cutaneous sensation, deltoid and teres
minor muscles affected
Median
From lateral and medial cords of plexus
Injury/lesion
Risk of injury in supracondylar fractures:
At elbow:
Thenar wasting
Hand of Benediction (when trying to make a fist only 4th and 5th fingers flex)
Unable to abduct thumb (point to ceiling) - abductor pollicis brevis
Carpal tunnel syndrome, can also —> thenar wasting
Radial
COURSE:
1.
2. Radial groove posterior to proximal humerus
3. Then wraps around laterally --> and accompanies brachial artery down humerus
4. Travels anteriorly over lateral condyle humerus into ACF
At ACF (before supinator) radial nerve bifurcates:
1. --> superficial branch Radial n (SENSORY dorsal hand and fingers)
2. --> deep branch radial n (MOTOR)
When deep branch passes through the supinator muscle, it then is called POSTERIOR
INTERROSEOUS N for rest of its course
Motor
Triceps
Bracioradialis and supinator = forearm supinators
Forearm posterior compartment
Abductor pollicis longus
Sensation
mollytim
Injury/lesion
Axilla - wrist drop and elbow extension
Radial groove (e.g. humeral shaft fracture) - wrist drop and grip weakness
saturday night palsy
Ulnar
APB
Can’t adduct shoulder or flex arm - Medially rotated (unopposed pec muscles), extended
(no elbow flexors), flexed wrist (increased flexor tone relative to extensors)
L l i j (Kl k P l )
Lower plexus injury (Klumpke Palsy)
Excessive abduction - e.g. catching branch as falling, pulling kid up by arm
C8/T1 root
claw hand
Unopposed action of finger extensor muscles. Lumbricals normally flex MCPJs and extend IPJs —>
paralysis of these will do the opposite.
Sensory
Brachial artery
From axillary artery, terminates into radial and ulnar arteries below elbow
Brachial a —>
Profunda/deep brachial (posterior compartment of arm)
Muscular
Nutrient artery
Ulnar (sup and inf) collaterals
Common interosseous artery (at around radial tuberosity) —> divides into ant and post
interosseous artery either side of the interosseous ligament
Terminal (ulnar and radial) arteries
Venae comitantes
The deep veins that accompany the large arteries (brachial, radial, ulnar)
Radial and ulnar arteries join together
Ligaments (3)
Radial/lateral collateral - from lateral epicondyle to radial aspect of annular lig
Ulnar/medial collateral - from medial epicondyle to olecranon of ulna and coronoid process (two
ligaments):
Radial collateral
Lateral ulnar collateral (lat epicondyle to ulna)
Annular (radio-ulnar)
FOREARMS
Dupytren’s contracture:
Localised thickening of palmar aponeurosis
Trigger finger
Localised tendon thickening of flexor tendon
CARPAL TUNNEL
Contains:
Flexor digitorum superficialis tendons (4)
Flexor digitorum profundus tendons (4)
Flexor pollicis longus tendon
Median nerve
Borders:
Ant: flexor retinaculum - crosses hamate/pisiform to trapezium/scaphoid
Lateral: trapezium
Medial: hamate
Floor: trapezoid and capitate
Sx
Median distal nerve distribution sensory loss/paraesthesia
In bad cases may have motor disturbance
Note: superficial/palmar cutaneous branch of median nerve diverges before tunnel and runs
superficial to it. Will have preserved palmar sensation
Flexor retinaculum:
Passing above:
Palmaris longus
Ulnar artery
Ulnar nerve
Passing below: contents of carpal tunnel
HAND MUSCLES
1. Thenar - originate from flexor retinaculum - recurrent branch of medial nerve innervates
1. Opponens pollicis
2. Flexor pollicis brevis
3. Abductor pollicis brevis
2. Adductor pollicis (ulnar n)
1.
h l ( l di )
Thenar muscles (coloured in)
Median n. - lateral two lumbricals and thenar muscles
Ulnar n. - interossei, other lumbricals, and hypothenar
Ulnar n. passes through Guyon’s canal on palmar side.
Ulnar artery also passes through
Lumbricals
Origin - palmar - radial side of tendons of FDP muscle