Posterior branches of cervical nerves

Posterior branches of cervical nerves

Posterior primary divisions of the upper three cervical nerves.
Details
Latin rami posteriores nervorum cervicalium
From
cervical nerves
Identifiers
Gray's p.921
Dorlands
/Elsevier
r_02/12691680
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy

The posterior branches of cervical nerves branch from the dorsal rami of the cervical nerves.

Branches

First

The posterior division of the first cervical or suboccipital nerve is larger than the anterior division, and emerges above the posterior arch of the atlas and beneath the vertebral artery. It enters the suboccipital triangle and supplies the muscles which bound this triangle, viz., the Rectus capitis posterior major, and the Obliqui superior and inferior; it gives branches also to the Rectus capitis posterior minor and the Semispinalis capitis. A filament from the branch to the Obliquus inferior joins the posterior division of the second cervical nerve.

The nerve occasionally gives off a cutaneous branch which accompanies the occipital artery to the scalp, and communicates with the greater and lesser occipital nerves.

Second

The posterior division of the second cervical nerve is much larger than the anterior division, and is the greatest of all the cervical posterior divisions. It emerges between the posterior arch of the atlas and the lamina of the axis, below the Obliquus inferior. It supplies a twig to this muscle, receives a communicating filament from the posterior division of the first cervical, and then divides into a large medial and a small lateral branch.

Third

The posterior division of the third cervical is intermediate in size between those of the second and fourth.

The posterior division of the suboccipital, and the medial branches of the posterior division of the second and third cervical nerves are sometimes joined by communicating loops to form the posterior cervical plexus.

Fourth through eighth

The posterior divisions of the lower five cervical nerves divide into medial and lateral branches.

Additional images

References

This article incorporates text in the public domain from the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)