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Comparative and developmental anatomy of the fibularis brevis muscle: morphological variants and their clinical significance. [PDF]

open access: yesFront Cell Dev Biol
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Accessory nerve injury

Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica, 1984
A series of 13 patients with an injury of the accessory nerve in the posterior cervical triangle is reported. In 11 patients the nerve was damaged during a lymph node biopsy and in two cases there was a sharp glass injury. Paralysis of the trapezius muscle occurred with resulting deformity and loss of function of the shoulder.
M, Vastamäki, K A, Solonen
openaire   +2 more sources

Spinal Accessory Nerve Injury

Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1999
Injury to the spinal accessory nerve can lead to dysfunction of the trapezius. The trapezius is a major scapular stabilizer and is composed of three functional components. It contributes to scapulothoracic rhythm by elevating, rotating, and retracting the scapula.
J M, Wiater, L U, Bigliani
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Extracranial Spinal Accessory Nerve Injury

Neurosurgery, 1993
Eighty-three consecutive patients with extracranial accessory nerve injury seen over a 12-year period are reviewed. The most common etiology was iatrogenic injury to the nerve at the time of previous surgery. Such operations were usually minor in nature and often related to lymph node or benign tumor removal.
T R, Donner, D G, Kline
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