- Dorsal branch of ulnar nerve
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Nerve: Dorsal branch of ulnar nerve Nerves of the left upper extremity. (Dorsal branch labeled at bottom left.) Latin ramus dorsalis nervi ulnaris Gray's subject #210 942 From ulnar nerve The dorsal branch of ulnar nerve arises about 5 cm. proximal to the wrist; it passes backward beneath the Flexor carpi ulnaris, perforates the deep fascia, and, running along the ulnar side of the back of the wrist and hand, divides into two dorsal digital branches; one supplies the ulnar side of the little finger; the other, the adjacent sides of the little and ring fingers.
It also sends a twig to join that given by the superficial branch of the radial nerve for the adjoining sides of the middle and ring fingers, and assists in supplying them.
A branch is distributed to the metacarpal region of the hand, communicating with a twig of the superficial branch of the radial nerve.
Additional images
External links
- Hand kinesiology at UK nerves/ulnar.htm - dorsal at right
- lesson5nervesofpostforearm at The Anatomy Lesson by Wesley Norman (Georgetown University)
- lesson5nervesofhand at The Anatomy Lesson by Wesley Norman (Georgetown University)
This article was originally based on an entry from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy. As such, some of the information contained within it may be outdated.
Nerves of upper limbs (primarily): the brachial plexus (C5–T1) (TA A14.2.03, GA 9.930) Supraclavicular Infraclavicular cutaneous: medial cutaneous of forearm · medial cutaneous of arm
ulnar: muscular · palmar · dorsal (dorsal digital nerves) · superficial (common palmar digital, proper palmar digital) · deep
median/medial root: see abovesubscapular (upper, lower) · thoracodorsal
axillary (superior lateral cutaneous of arm)
radial: muscular · cutaneous (posterior of arm, inferior lateral of arm, posterior of forearm) · superficial (dorsal digital nerves) · deep (posterior interosseous)Other Categories:- Nerves of the upper limb
- Neuroscience stubs
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