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Case Reports
. 1989 Dec;66(5):229-40.
doi: 10.2535/ofaj1936.66.5_229.

A case of the scalenus anterior muscle passing behind the left subclavian artery

Case Reports

A case of the scalenus anterior muscle passing behind the left subclavian artery

N Inuzuka. Okajimas Folia Anat Jpn. 1989 Dec.

Abstract

The scalenus anterior muscle was found to pass behind the left subclavian artery and the first thoracic nerve in a 95-year-old Japanese woman. The scalenus anterior muscle originates from the fifth and sixth cervical vertebrae and inserts on the first rib more dorsal than typical. It is innervated by the fifth and seventh cervical nerves. The muscle belly is thin. The scalenus minimus was not found. The left vertebral artery originates from the aortic arch and enters the transverse foramen of the fifth cervical vertebra. The primary vertebral artery arises from the costocervical artery. The internal thoracic artery originates from the subclavian artery more distally than typical. The axillary artery crosses the brachial plexus between the eighth cervical and first thoracic nerves. Because the first thoracic nerve joins the brachial plexus more distally than usual, the plexus has no typical inferior trunk. Comparative anatomy shows that the muscles, nerves and arteries of the lateral cervical region of the present case maintains primitive characteristics. From the functional viewpoint, the mechanical efficiency of the scalenus anterior muscle is probably lower than usual due to the lower point of origin and the dorsal shift of the insertion.

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