Proper palmar digital nerves of median nerve

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Proper palmar digital nerves of median nerve
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Superficial palmar nerves.
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Deep palmar nerves.
Details
From Common palmar digital nerves of median nerve
Identifiers
Latin nervi digitales palmares proprii nervi mediani
TA98 A14.2.03.039
TA2 6466
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy

In the palm of the hand the median nerve is covered by the skin and the palmar aponeurosis, and rests on the tendons of the flexor muscles. Immediately after emerging from under the transverse carpal ligament the median nerve becomes enlarged and flattened and splits into a smaller, lateral, and a larger, medial portion.

Contents

The lateral portion supplies a short, stout branch to certain of the muscles of the ball of the thumb, viz., the abductor pollicis brevis, the opponens pollicis, and the superficial head of the flexor brevis, and then divides into three proper palmar digital nerves of median nerve (proper volar digital nerves):

It also divides into two common palmar digital nerves:

Each proper digital nerve, opposite the base of the first phalanx, gives off a dorsal branch which joins the dorsal digital nerve from the superficial branch of the radial nerve, and supplies the integument on the dorsal aspect of the last phalanx.

At the end of the digit, the proper digital nerve divides into two branches,

The proper digital nerves, as they run along the fingers, are placed superficial to the corresponding arteries.

See also

Additional images

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References

PD-icon.svgThis article incorporates text in the public domain from page 938 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)