Yonsei Med J.  2003 Dec;44(6):1110-1113. 10.3349/ymj.2003.44.6.1110.

A Variation of the Musculocutaneous Nerve Absent

Affiliations
  • 1Division in Anatomy and Developmental Biology, Dept. Oral Biology, Oral Science Research Center, College of Dentistry, Brain Korea 21 Project for Med Sci, Yonsei Univ, Seoul.
  • 2Department of Life Sci, College of Liberal Arts and Sci, Yonsei Univ, Wonju.
  • 3Department of Anatomy, College of Med, Konkuk Univ, Korea. kskoh@kku.ac.kr

Abstract

A variation of the brachial plexus, characterized by the absence of the musculocutaneous nerve on the left arm, was found during the dissection of a 28-year old male cadaver. The whole lateral cord was joined to the median nerve, which it met in two points. One was a typical junction of both roots of the median nerve at the level of the coracoid process. The other was a junction of the remaining lateral cord and the median nerve, which was 92 mm away from the typical junction. This case provided some evidence about the absence of the musculocutaneous nerve, rather than a complete fusion of the median and musculocutaneous nerves. As the nerves are named due to their course or innervation, and not from their origin, it is reasonable to assume that the combined nerve was actually the median nerve, and that the musculocutaneous nerve did not exist.

Keyword

Variation; brachial plexus; musculocutaneous nerve; median nerve

MeSH Terms

Adult
Brachial Plexus/abnormalities/pathology
Cadaver
Human
Male
Musculocutaneous Nerve/*abnormalities/pathology
Full Text Links
  • YMJ
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr