Relationships among Coracobrachialis, Biceps Brachii, and Pectoralis Minor Muscles and Their Correlation with Bifurcated Coracoid Process

Author:

Zielinska Nicol1,Tubbs R. Shane23456,Podgórski Michał7,Konschake Marko8ORCID,Aragonés Paloma910,Grzelecki Dariusz11ORCID,Olewnik Łukasz1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anatomical Dissection and Donation, Medical University of Łódź, Poland

2. Department of Neurosurgery, Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA, USA

3. Department of Neurosurgery and Ochsner Neuroscience Institute, Ochsner Health System, New Orleans, LA, USA

4. Department of Anatomical Sciences, St. George’s University, Grenada

5. Department of Neurology, Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA, USA

6. Department of Structural and Cellular Biology, Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA, USA

7. Department of Diagnostic Imaging, Polish Mother’s Memorial Hospital-Research Institute, Łódź, Poland

8. Institute of Clinical and Functional Anatomy, Medical University of Innsbruck (MUI), Innsbruck, Austria

9. Department of Orthopedics Surgery, Hospital Santa Cristina, Madrid, Spain

10. Department of Human Anatomy and Embryology, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain

11. Department of Orthopedics and Rheumoorthopedics, Centre of Postgraduate Medical Education, Otwock, Poland

Abstract

The aim of this study is to demonstrate the relationship between the proximal attachment of the coracobrachialis muscle and the short head of the biceps brachii and the distal attachment of the pectoralis minor. Their correlation with the bifurcated coracoid process (CP) will be also assessed. On the basis of these observations, a new classification of structures attached to the coracoid process is proposed. Classical anatomical dissection was performed on one hundred forty-five upper limbs. Three types of relationship between the coracobrachialis muscle and the short head of the biceps brachii were observed in the cadavers. In type I (occurring in 54%), the coracobrachialis and the short head of the biceps brachii created a common junction attached to a single CP. Type II was divided into two subtypes (a and b). Subtype IIa (frequency 10%) was represented by independent proximal attachments of the short head of the biceps brachii and the coracobrachialis muscles to the CP. In subtype IIb (frequency 5%), the coracobrachialis muscle was two-headed (the first head located under the second) and not connected to the short head of the biceps brachii; all heads were attached to a single CP. Type III (frequency 31%) was characterized by a two-headed coracobrachialis muscle, the first head originating from a bifurcated CP laterally to the short head of the biceps brachii and the second medially to this structure. Different variations connected with the mentioned structures could be problematic for surgeons during operations, so detailed knowledge of them could contribute to more efficient procedures.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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