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Question 1
Incorrect
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A man presents to the emergency department with an injury that has damaged the opponens pollicis muscle.
Which of the following statements regarding the opponens pollicis muscle is considered correct?Your Answer: It assists with the abduction of the thumb
Correct Answer: It flexes the first metacarpal bone at the carpometacarpal joint
Explanation:Opponens pollicis is a muscle of thenar eminence, it is triangular in shape and lies deep to flexor pollicis brevis and abductor pollicis brevis. It originates from the flexor retinaculum, tubercles of scaphoid and trapezium, abductor pollicis longus tendon.
Its insertion is in the radial side of the base of proximal phalanx of thumb. It is supplied by the median nerve (C8, T1). It receives blood supply from superficial arch.
It flexes the metacarpal bone medially across the palm, also rotating it medially, causing opposition, the palmar aspect of the terminal segment of thumb contacts the flexor aspects of any other digit.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 2
Incorrect
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Regarding the brachioradialis muscle, which of the following statements is true?
Your Answer: It is innervated by the musculocutaneous nerve
Correct Answer: It assists with supination of the forearm at the radioulnar joints
Explanation:Brachioradialis is a fusiform muscle located in the lateral part of the posterior forearm. Along with extensor carpi radialis brevis and extensor carpi radialis longus, it comprises the radial group of forearm muscles, which belong to the superficial layer of posterior forearm muscles. Although anatomically part of the posterior forearm muscles, which are known to be forearm extensors, brachioradialis’ fibre orientation enables it to rather flex the forearm, and aids in supination of the forearm at the radioulnar joint.
The brachioradialis muscle originates from the upper two-thirds of the lateral supracondylar ridge of humerus and the anterior surface of the lateral intermuscular septum of the arm. It slides over the lateral surface of the elbow joint, entering the anterolateral cubital area. The muscle fibres course inferiorly down the radial part of the anterior forearm, forming a thick tendon in approximately the middle of the forearm. This tendon then traverses the remainder of the forearm, inserting near the wrist, just proximal to the styloid process of radius.
Brachioradialis is innervated by the radial nerve (from the root values C5-C6) that stems from the posterior cord of the brachial plexus. Blood supply to the brachioradialis muscle comes from branches of the radial artery, radial recurrent artery and the radial collateral branch of the deep brachial artery.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 3
Incorrect
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A 27-year-old man presents with a laceration of his forearm that severed the nerve that innervates flexor carpi radialis.
Which of the following nerves has been damaged in this case? Select ONE answer only.Your Answer: The radial nerve
Correct Answer: The median nerve
Explanation:Flexor carpi radialis is innervated by the median nerve.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 4
Incorrect
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A 30-year-old man suffers from an open fracture of his forearm. As a consequence of his injury, the nerve that innervates the pronator quadratus muscle was severed.
Which of the following statements regarding the pronator quadratus muscle is considered correct?Your Answer: It receives its blood supply from the radial artery
Correct Answer: Its deep fibres bind the radius and ulna together
Explanation:Pronator quadratus is a deep-seated, short, flat, and quadrilateral muscle with fibres running in a parallel direction.
It arises from the oblique ridge on the anterior surface of the distal fourth of the Ulna. It is inserted in lateral border and anterior surface of the distal fourth of the radius. It is innervated by the anterior interosseous nerve, a branch of the median nerve (C8-T1). It is vascularized by the anterior interosseous artery.
The action of the pronator quadratus muscle along with the pronator teres result in the pronation of the radioulnar joint. Contraction of this muscle pulls the distal end of the radius over the ulna, resulting in the pronation of the radioulnar joint
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 5
Correct
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A 30 year old man stabbed in the upper arm presents to the Emergency Department and you perform a vascular examination.
The brachial pulse can be best palpated at ?Your Answer: In the antecubital fossa, medial to the tendon of the biceps brachii
Explanation:The brachial artery can be palpated in the antecubital fossa, medial to the tendon of the biceps brachii muscle.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 6
Incorrect
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Due to a traffic accident, a male patient was unable to lift his arm, indicating an injury at the glenohumeral joint. Based on the patient’s current condition, which nerve or nerves are may likely damaged?
Your Answer: Axillary and thoracodorsal nerve
Correct Answer: Axillary and suprascapular nerve
Explanation:A suprascapular nerve injury causes numbness in the shoulder, as well as weakness in abduction and external rotation.
Damage to the axillary nerve can result in shoulder or arm muscle weakness, as well as difficulty lifting the arm. This is because the deltoid and supraspinatus muscles, which are innervated by the axillary and suprascapular nerves, are responsible for abduction of the arm at the shoulder joint.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 7
Incorrect
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A man working as a waiter cuts his arm on a glass while he was working. The palmaris longus muscle was damaged as a consequence of his injury.
Which of the following statements regarding the palmaris longus muscle is considered correct?Your Answer: It is absent in approximately 50% of the population
Correct Answer: It receives its blood supply from the ulnar artery
Explanation:The palmaris longus is a small, fusiform-shaped muscle located on the anterior forearm of the human upper extremity. The palmaris longus muscle is commonly present but may be absent in a small percentage of the population, ranging from 2.5% to 26% of individuals, depending on the studied population.
The palmaris longus belongs to the anterior forearm flexor group in the human upper extremity. The muscle attaches proximally to the medial humeral epicondyle and distally to the palmar aponeurosis and flexor retinaculum. The blood supply to the palmaris longus muscle is via the ulnar artery, a branch of the brachial artery in the human upper extremity.
The palmaris longus muscle receives its innervation via branches of the median nerve containing nerve roots C5-T1. Median nerve injury at or above the elbow joint (including brachial plexus and nerve root injury) can lead to deficits in the palmaris longus and other forearm flexor muscles, leading to weakened elbow flexion, wrist flexion, radial deviation, finger flexion, thumb opposition, flexion, and abduction, in addition to the loss of sensory function in the distribution of the median nerve.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 8
Incorrect
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A patient presents to ED complaining of pins and needles over the lateral three and a half digits. You suspect carpal tunnel syndrome. Which of the following clinical features would you most expect to see on examination:
Your Answer: Atrophy of the adductor pollicis muscle
Correct Answer: Inability to touch the pad of the little finger with the thumb
Explanation:Compression of the median nerve in the carpal tunnel will result in weakness and atrophy of the thenar muscles – resulting in weakness of opposition, abduction and flexion of the thumb at the metacarpophalangeal joint and anaesthesia or paraesthesia over the distribution of the palmar digital branch of the median nerve (skin over the palmar surface and fingertips of the lateral three and a half digits). The adductor pollicis muscle is innervated by the ulnar nerve, and abduction of the fingers is produced by the interossei, also innervated by the ulnar nerve. Flexion of the interphalangeal joint of the thumb is produced by the flexor pollicis longus, and flexion of the distal interphalangeal joint of the index finger is produced by the flexor digitorum profundus. Median nerve injury at the wrist will not affect the long flexors of the forearm as these are innervated by the anterior interosseous nerve which arises in the proximal forearm.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 9
Incorrect
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A patent has weakness of humeral flexion and extension. A CT scan reveals that he has suffered damage to the nerve that innervates pectoralis major.
Pectoralis major receives its innervation from which of the following nerves? Select ONE answer only.Your Answer: Lateral pectoral nerve and long thoracic nerve
Correct Answer: Lateral and medial pectoral nerves
Explanation:Pectoralis major is a thick, fan-shaped muscle situated in the chest. It makes up the bulk of the chest musculature in the male and lies underneath the breast in the female. It overlies the thinner pectoralis minor muscle.
Superficial muscles of the chest and arm showing pectoralis major (from Gray’s Anatomy)
Pectoralis major has two heads; the clavicular head and the sternocostal head. The clavicular head originates from the anterior border and medial half of the clavicle. The sternocostal head originates from the anterior surface of the sternum, the superior six costal cartilages and the aponeurosis of the external oblique muscle. It inserts into the lateral lip of the bicipital groove of the humerus.
Pectoralis major receives dual innervation from the medial pectoral nerve and the lateral pectoral nerve.
Its main actions are as follows:
Flexes humerus (clavicular head)
Extends humerus (sternocostal head)
Adducts and medially rotates the humerus
Draws scapula anteriorly and inferiorly -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 10
Incorrect
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A 25-year-old man suffers from a shoulder injury that damaged the nerve that innervates the infraspinatus muscle.
Which of the following nerves may most likely be affected?Your Answer: The axillary nerve
Correct Answer: The suprascapular nerve
Explanation:The suprascapular nerve (C5-C6) innervates the infraspinatus. It originates at the superior trunk of the brachial plexus. It runs laterally across the lateral cervical region to supply the infraspinatus and also the supraspinatus.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 11
Correct
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A man presents to the emergency department with a hand laceration that has damaged the opponens digiti minimi muscle.
All of the following statements regarding the opponens digiti minimi muscle is considered correct, except:Your Answer: It is innervated by the superficial branch of the ulnar nerve
Explanation:Opponens digiti minimi (ODM) is an intrinsic muscle of the hand. It’s a triangular muscle that extends between the hamate bone (carpal bone) and the 5th metacarpal bone. It forms the hypothenar muscle group together with the abductor digiti minimi and flexor digiti minimi brevis, based on the medial side of the palm (hypothenar eminence). These muscles act together in moving the little finger. The opponens digiti minimi is responsible for flexion, lateral rotation and opposition of the little finger.
Its origin is the hook of hamate and flexor retinaculum. It inserts into the medial border of 5th metacarpal bone. It is innervated by the deep branch of the ulnar nerve, which stems from the brachial plexus (C8, T1 spinal nerves).
Its blood supply is by the deep palmar branch of ulnar artery and deep palmar arch, which is the terminal branch of the radial artery. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 12
Incorrect
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A man suffered from a back injury due to a fall from a ladder. Significant bruising was found to be overlying his latissimus dorsi muscle.
Which of the following statements regarding the latissimus dorsi muscle is considered correct?Your Answer: It laterally rotates the humerus as part of its action
Correct Answer: It raises the body towards the arm during climbing
Explanation:The latissimus dorsi muscle is a broad, flat muscle that occupies the majority of the lower posterior thorax. The muscle’s primary function is of the upper extremity but is also considered to be a respiratory accessory muscle.
Latissimus dorsi is a climbing muscle. With the arms fixed above the head, it can raise the trunk upwards, together with the help of pectoralis major.
Functionally, the latissimus dorsi muscle belongs to the muscles of the scapular motion. This muscle is able to pull the inferior angle of the scapula in various directions, producing movements on the shoulder joint (internal rotation, adduction and extension of the arm). It is innervated by the thoracodorsal nerve (C6 – C8) from the posterior cord of the brachial plexus, which enters the muscle on its deep surface.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 13
Correct
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A patient was diagnosed with Erb's palsy as a result of a brachial plexus injury sustained in a car accident and, as a result, suffers from left arm paralysis. The following muscles are affected by the injury, except
Your Answer: Trapezius
Explanation:Damage to the C5 and C6 nerve roots causes Erb’s palsy.
The spinal accessory nerve (CN XI) innervates the trapezius muscle, thus you would not expect this muscle to be impacted.
The trapezius is a muscle that runs from the base of the neck across the shoulders and into the centre of the back.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 14
Incorrect
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Which of the following statements is correct about the extensor digitorum muscle?
Your Answer: It lies in the anterior compartment of the forearm
Correct Answer: It extends the medial four digits at the metacarpophalangeal joints
Explanation:Extensor digitorum is a long muscle located in the posterior compartment of the forearm. Together with the extensor carpi ulnaris and extensor digiti minimi, extensor carpi radialis longus and brevis as well as the brachioradialis, it belongs to the group of superficial extensors of the forearm. These muscles can be easily palpated in the lateral aspect of the posterior forearm, especially during the extension of hand when they are contracted.
Extensor digitorum runs from the lateral epicondyle of humerus to the medial four phalanges of the hand. In this way, it generates the pull for the extension of the four medial fingers in their metacarpophalangeal and both interphalangeal joints. Extensor digitorum also participates in the extension of the wrist.
Extensor digitorum is innervated by posterior interosseous nerve which is a continuation of a deep branch of radial nerve (root value C7 and C8).
Extensor digitorum is vascularized by the branches of three different arteries: (1) posterior interosseous artery, (2) radial recurrent artery, and (3) anterior interosseous artery. Anterior and posterior interosseous arteries are the branches of the common interosseous artery that arises from the ulnar artery. The radial recurrent artery is a branch of the radial artery.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 15
Incorrect
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Which of the following is most likely affected in De Quervain's tenosynovitis?
Your Answer: Extensor pollicis longus
Correct Answer: Extensor pollicis brevis
Explanation:De Quervain tenosynovitis is named after the Swiss surgeon, Fritz de Quervain, who first described it in 1895. It is a condition which involves tendon entrapment affecting the first dorsal compartment of the wrist. With this condition thickening of the tendon sheaths around the abductor pollicis longus and extensor pollicis brevis develops where the tendons pass in through the fibro-osseous tunnel located along the radial styloid at the distal wrist. Pain is exacerbated by thumb movement and radial and ulnar deviation of the wrist.
The estimated prevalence of de Quervain tenosynovitis is about 0.5% in men and 1.3% in women with peak prevalence among those in their forties and fifties. It may be seen more commonly in individuals with a history of medial or lateral epicondylitis. Bilateral involvement is often reported in new mothers or child care providers in whom spontaneous resolution typically occurs once lifting of the child is less frequent.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 16
Correct
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A patient presents with a laceration on his hand and wrist that has cut the nerve that innervates opponens pollicis.
The opponens pollicis muscle is innervated by which of the following nerves? Select ONE answer only.Your Answer: The recurrent branch of the median nerve
Explanation:Opponens pollicis is a small, triangular muscle that forms part of the thenar eminence. It originates from the flexor retinaculum and the tubercle of trapezium bone and inserts into the whole length of the first metacarpal bone on its radial side.
Opponens pollicis is innervated by the recurrent branch of the median nerve and receives its blood supply from the superficial palmar arch.
The main action of opponens pollicis is to flex the first metacarpal bone at the carpometacarpal joint, which opposes the thumb towards the centre of the palm. It also medially rotates the first metacarpal bone at the carpometacarpal joint. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 17
Incorrect
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Which of the following movements is controlled by the pectoralis major muscle?
Your Answer: Extension, adduction and medial rotation of the humerus
Correct Answer: Flexion, adduction and medial rotation of the humerus
Explanation:The pectoralis major is a muscle that runs across the top of the chest and connects to a ridge on the back of the humerus (the bone of the upper arm).
Adduction, or lowering, of the arm (opposed to the deltoideus muscle) and rotation of the arm forward around the axis of the body are two of its main functions.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 18
Incorrect
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A 12-year old boy is taken to the emergency room after accidentally falling off the monkey bars. Witnesses of the accident reported that, when the patient fell, he hit his right hand on a bar and a loud thump was heard. On examination, the hand is oedematous, tender and erythematous. On ultrasound, a rupture of the flexor carpi ulnaris is noted.
Which of the following statements is true regarding the flexor carpi ulnaris?Your Answer: It is innervated by the median nerve
Correct Answer: It acts to adduct the hand at the wrist joint
Explanation:Flexor carpi ulnaris is a fusiform muscle located in the anterior compartment of the forearm. It belongs to the superficial flexors of the forearm, along with pronator teres, palmaris longus, flexor digitorum superficialis and flexor carpi radialis. Flexor carpi ulnaris is the most medial of the superficial flexors.
Innervation of the flexor carpi ulnaris muscle is from the brachial plexus via the ulnar nerve (C7-T1).
Flexor carpi ulnaris receives its arterial blood supply via three different routes. Proximally, a branch of the posterior ulnar recurrent artery supplies the muscle as it passes between the humeral and ulnar heads. Branches of the ulnar artery supply the middle and distal parts of the muscle, with an accessory supply also present distally via the inferior ulnar collateral artery.
Due to its position and direction in the forearm, flexor carpi ulnaris can move the hand sideways as well as flexing it. Contracting with flexor carpi radialis and palmaris longus, flexor carpi ulnaris produces flexion of the hand at the wrist joint. However, when it contracts alongside the extensor carpi ulnaris muscle in the posterior compartment, their counteracting forces produce adduction of the hand at the wrist, otherwise known as ulnar deviation or ulnar flexion
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 19
Correct
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Most of the lymph from vessels that drain the breast is collected in which of the following lymph nodes?
Your Answer: Axillary nodes
Explanation:Lymph is the fluid that flows through the lymphatic system.
Axillary lymph nodes are near the breasts. They are often the first location to which breast cancer spreads if it moves beyond the breast tissue. They receive approximately 75% of lymph drainage from the breast via lymphatic vessels, laterally and superiorly.
The lymph usually first drains to the anterior axillary nodes, and from here, through the central axillary, apical, and supraclavicular nodes in sequence.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 20
Incorrect
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A 33-year-old heavily muscled man presents with left-sided chest pain. After taking part in a powerlifting competition, he felt a painful snap at the front of his shoulder and chest. There is also the presence of bruising and swelling over the left side of his chest. A ruptured pectoralis major muscle was suspected upon examining the injured area.
Which of the following statements regarding the surface markings of the pectoralis major muscle is considered correct?Your Answer: It has three heads
Correct Answer: It inserts into the lateral lip of the bicipital groove of the humerus
Explanation:The pectoralis major is the superior most and largest muscle of the anterior chest wall. It is a thick, fan-shaped muscle that lies underneath the breast tissue and forms the anterior wall of the axilla.
Its origin lies anterior surface of the medial half of the clavicle, the anterior surface of the sternum, the first 7 costal cartilages, the sternal end of the sixth rib, and the aponeurosis of the external oblique of the anterior abdominal wall.
The insertion of the pectoralis major is at the lateral lip of the intertubercular sulcus of the humerus. There are 2 heads of the pectoralis major, the clavicular and the sternocostal, which reference their area of origin.
The function of the pectoralis major is 3-fold and dependent on which heads of muscles are involved:
– Flexion, adduction and medial rotation of the arm at the glenohumeral joint
– Clavicular head causes flexion of the extended arm
– Sternoclavicular head causes extension of the flexed armArterial supply of the pectoralis major, the pectoral artery, arises from the second branch of the axillary artery, the thoracoacromial trunk.
The 2 heads of the pectoralis major have different nervous supplies. The clavicular head derives its nerve supply from the lateral pectoral nerve. The medial pectoral nerve innervates the sternocostal head. The lateral pectoral nerve arises directly from the lateral cord of the brachial plexus, and the medial pectoral nerve arises from the medial cord.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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