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Sacral plexus

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Nerve: Sacral plexus
Plan of sacral and pudendal plexuses.
Dissection of side wall of pelvis showing sacral and pudendal plexuses.
Latin plexus sacralis
Gray's subject #213 957
Dorlands/Elsevier p_24/12648416

In human anatomy, the sacral plexus is a nerve plexus emerging from the sacral vertebrae (S1-S4), and which provides nerves for the pelvis and lower limbs.

Contents

[edit] Structure

The sacral plexus is formed by the lumbosacral trunk, the anterior division of the first, and portions of the anterior divisions of the second and third sacral nerves. The nerves forming the sacral plexus converge toward the lower part of the greater sciatic foramen, and unite to form a flattened band, from the anterior and posterior surfaces of which several branches arise. The band itself is continued as the sciatic nerve, which splits on the back of the thigh into the tibial nerve and common fibular nerve; these two nerves sometimes arise separately from the plexus, and in all cases their independence can be shown by dissection.

Often, the sacral plexus and the lumbar plexus are considered to be one large nerve plexus, the lumbosacral plexus. The lumbosacral trunk connects the two plexuses.

[edit] Relations

The sacral plexus lies on the back of the pelvis between the piriformis muscle and the pelvic fascia. In front of it are the internal iliac artery, internal iliac vein, the ureter, and the sigmoid colon. The superior gluteal artery and vein run between the lumbosacral trunk and the first sacral nerve, and the inferior gluteal artery and vein between the second and third sacral nerves.

All the nerves entering the plexus, with the exception of the third sacral, split into ventral and dorsal divisions, and the nerves arising from these are as follows:

Nerve Segments Muscles Sensory
Nerve to quadratus femoris L4-S1 gemellus inferior, quadratus femoris
Superior gluteal nerve L4-S1 gluteus medius, gluteus minimus, tensor fasciae latae
Sciatic nerve L4-S3
* Tibial nerve L4-S3 posterior compartment posterolateral leg and foot
* Common fibular nerve L4-S3 anterior and lateral compartments anterolateral leg and foot
Nerve to obturator internus L5-S2 gemellus superior, obturator internus
Inferior gluteal nerve L5-S2 gluteus maximus
Nerve to piriformis S1-S2 piriformis
Posterior cutaneous nerve of thigh S1-S3 - thigh
Pudendal nerve S2-S4 bulbospongiosus, deep transverse perineal, ischiocavernosus, sphincter urethrae, superficial transverse perineal clitoris, penis
Coccygeal nerve S4-Co1 - perineum

[edit] Additional images

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

This article was originally based on an entry from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy. As such, some of the information contained herein may be outdated. Please edit the article if this is the case, and feel free to remove this notice when it is no longer relevant.

Lumbosacral plexus

lumbar plexus: iliohypogastric - ilioinguinal - genitofemoral (femoral branch/lumboinguinal, genital branch) - lateral cutaneous of thigh (patellar) - obturator (accessory obturator) - femoral (saphenous)

sacral/coccygeal plexus: to quadratus femoris - to obturator internus - to the piriformis - superior gluteal - inferior gluteal - posterior cutaneous of thigh
sciatic: tibial (sural - medial plantar - lateral plantar) - common fibular (deep fibular - superficial fibular)

pudendal plexus: perforating cutaneous - pudendal (dorsal of the penis/clitoris, inferior anal, perineal and posterior scrotal/labial) - anococcygeal

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