C6 and not C5 nerve fibers more commonly contribute most to deltoid muscle innervation: anatomical study with application to better diagnosing cervical nerve injuries Article

Full Text via DOI: 10.1007/s10143-022-01761-z Web of Science: 000764486500002
International Collaboration

Cited authors

  • Thimjon C, Olewnik L, Iwanaga J, Loukas M, Dumont AS, Hanna A, Tubbs RS

Abstract

  • Most anatomical textbooks list both the C5 and C6 spinal nerves as contributing to the deltoid muscle's innervation via the axillary nerve. To our knowledge, no previous study has detailed the exact spinal nerve components of the axillary nerve terminating in the deltoid via cadaveric dissection. Twenty formalin-fixed cadavers (40 sides) underwent dissection of the brachial plexus. The fascicles making up the axillary nerve branch that specifically terminated in the deltoid muscle were traced proximally. The axillary nerve branch to the deltoid muscle was most commonly (70%) made up of three spinal nerve segments and less commonly (30%) by two spinal nerve segments. For all axillary nerve branches to the deltoid muscle, C4 spinal nerves contributed 0-5%, C5 spinal nerves contributed 1-80%, C6 spinal nerve contributed 15-99%, C7 spinal nerves contributed 0-30%, and C8 and T1 spinal nerves were not found to contribute any fibers to any deltoid muscle branches. The nerve to the deltoid muscle was contributed to equally by C5 and C6 nerve fibers on 10% of sides. On 16% of sides, C5 contributed the most nerve fibers to this muscle. On 35% of sides, C6 contributed the majority fibers found in the axillary nerve branches to the deltoid. Based on our anatomical study, C6 is more often than not the main level of innervation. C5 was never the sole component of the axillary nerve branches to the deltoid muscle. Such anatomical data will now need to be reconciled with clinical studies.

Publication date

  • 2022

Published in

Category

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 0344-5607

Number of pages

  • 6