This nerve palsy can be caused by a forceful depression of the shoulder girdle and surgical procedures such as breast mastectomy. It presents with scapular winging during arm flexion.
What is long thoracic Nerve Palsy?
These nerves supply the lumbricles.
What is the median and ulnar nerve?
This nerve innervates the medial portion of the thigh.
What is the Obturator Nerve?
This muscle originates at the distal ⅔ of the lateral fibula and inserts into the tuberosity of the 5th metatarsal.
What is Peroneus Brevis?
At this vertebra is where the spinal cord ends.
What is the L2 vertebrae?
This nerve innervates the sternocleidomastoid and the Trapezius.
What is the spinal accessory nerve?
This nerve palsy creates difficulty extending the 4th and 5 digits on the hand.
What is ulnar nerve palsy?
This bony landmark can be palpated while the patient is lying prone. Find the middle of the iliac crest and slide your fingers 4-5 inches distally down the femur.
What is the Greater Trochanter (of Femur)?
The combination of plantar flexion, adduction, and inversion is this movement.
What is Supination of the foot?
A patient comes in with pain in the right shoulder that is not connected to movement and it is very noticeable after eating, this is a visceral pain referral from this organ.
What is the gallbladder?
This tendon can be palpated when the patient is in the modified Crass Position.
What is Supraspinatus?
This muscle can be found when the wrist is flexed and ulnar deviates.
What is the flexor carpi ulnaris?
These three thigh muscles have the same origin, known as the pes anserine.
What is the Sartorious, Gracilis and Semitendinosus?
This leg muscle is palpated with the patient prone and a bent leg.
What is the Soleus?
These three muscles make up the walls of the Suboccipital Triangle.
What are the Obliquus capitis Superior, Obliquus Capitis Inferior, and Rectus Capitis posterior Major?
This anatomical space bordered by the traps, lats, and medial scapula is a gateway to the erector spinae muscles and 6th and 7th ribs.
What is the triangle of auscultation?
The abductor pollicis, flexor pollicis brevis, and opponens pollicis originate on what carpal bone.
What is the trapezium?
These nerve roots innervate the middle abdomen.
What is T9-T10?
This nerve root palsy results in decreased strength in the gastrocnemius, soleus, and plantaris, as well as weakness in the posterior tibialis resulting in fallen arch and plantar flexion weakness.
What is L5/S1 nerve root palsy?
During breathing air travels into the lungs from the increased volume and decreased pressure in the lungs explained by this law.
What is Boyle’s Law?
This artery branches off of the 2nd zone of the axillary artery.
What is the Thoracoacromial Artery?
These muscles go through the 4th osseous tunnel.
What are the Extensor indicis and Extensor digitorum?
This condition is caused by the compression of the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve and results in symptoms such as pain, numbness and prickling in the lateral thigh.
What is Meralgia Paraesthetica?
This knee ligaments function is to reduce excessive valgus force.
What is Medial Collateral Ligament?
This bony landmark can be found inferior and anterior to the mastoid process, but superior and posterior to the angle of mandible.
What is the transverse process of C1?