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  2. Arm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arm_innervation

    This nerve continues in the arm, travelling in a plane between the biceps and triceps muscles. At the cubital fossa, this nerve is deep to the pronator teres muscle and is the most medial structure in the fossa.

  3. Upper limb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_limb

    The ulnar nerve innervates the muscles of the forearm and hand not innervated by the median nerve. The axillary nerve innervates the deltoid and teres minor. The radial nerve innervates the posterior muscles of the arm and forearm; Collateral branches of the brachial plexus: [13] The dorsal scapular nerve innervates rhomboid major, minor and ...

  4. Radial nerve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radial_nerve

    The radial nerve and its branches provide motor innervation to the dorsal arm muscles (the triceps brachii and the anconeus) and the extrinsic extensors of the wrists and hands; it also provides cutaneous sensory innervation to most of the back of the hand, except for the back of the little finger and adjacent half of the ring finger (which are ...

  5. Fascial compartments of arm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fascial_compartments_of_arm

    The muscles of this compartment are the triceps brachii and anconeus muscle and these are innervated by the radial nerve. Their blood supply is from the profunda brachii. The triceps brachii is a large muscle containing three heads a lateral, medial, and middle. The anconeus is a small

  6. Musculocutaneous nerve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musculocutaneous_nerve

    The musculocutaneous nerve is a mixed branch of the lateral cord of the brachial plexus derived from cervical spinal nerves C5-C7. It arises opposite the lower border of the pectoralis minor. [1] It provides motor innervation to the muscles of the anterior compartment of the arm: the coracobrachialis, biceps brachii, and brachialis. [2]

  7. Medial cutaneous nerve of arm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medial_cutaneous_nerve_of_arm

    It passes through the axilla, at first lying behind, and then medial to the axillary vein, and communicates with the intercostobrachial nerve.. It descends along the medial side of the brachial artery to the middle of the arm, where it pierces the deep fascia, and is distributed to the skin of the back of the lower third of the arm, extending as far as the elbow, where some filaments are lost ...

  8. Axillary nerve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axillary_nerve

    The axillary nerve supplies two muscles in the arm: deltoid (a muscle of the shoulder) and teres minor (one of the rotator cuff muscles). The axillary nerve also carries sensory information from the shoulder joint. It also innervates the skin, covering the inferior region of the deltoid muscle, known as the regimental badge area. [9]

  9. Posterior compartment of the forearm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posterior_compartment_of...

    The deep muscles arise from the distal part of the ulna and the surrounding interosseous membrane. The brachioradialis , flexor of the elbow , is unusual in that it is located in the posterior compartment, but it is actually a muscle of flexor / anterior compartment of the forearm.