Lateral Vertebral Muscles 3D

  • Anterior Scalene

    • * Arises from the transverse processes of CV3–CV6.
    • * Inserts at the scalene tubercle on the first rib.
    • * Elevates the first rib and contributes to neck flexion.
    • * Innervated by lower cervical nerves (C5–C8).

 

  • Middle Scalene

    • * Originates from the transverse processes of CV2–CV7.
    • * Inserts on the upper surface of the first rib.
    • * Raises the first rib and aids in neck flexion.
    • * Innervated by lower cervical nerves (C5–C8).

 

  • Posterior Scalene

    • * Arises from the transverse processes of CV4–CV6.
    • * Inserts on the outer surface of the second rib.
    • * Elevates the second rib and contributes to neck flexion.
    • * Innervated by lower cervical nerves (C6–C8).

This video is not approved for CME yet. Please check in a few days for the approval result. Thank you for your patience.

Write A New Comment

0 Comments

  • Anterior Scalene

    • * Arises from the transverse processes of CV3–CV6.
    • * Inserts at the scalene tubercle on the first rib.
    • * Elevates the first rib and contributes to neck flexion.
    • * Innervated by lower cervical nerves (C5–C8).

 

  • Middle Scalene

    • * Originates from the transverse processes of CV2–CV7.
    • * Inserts on the upper surface of the first rib.
    • * Raises the first rib and aids in neck flexion.
    • * Innervated by lower cervical nerves (C5–C8).

 

  • Posterior Scalene

    • * Arises from the transverse processes of CV4–CV6.
    • * Inserts on the outer surface of the second rib.
    • * Elevates the second rib and contributes to neck flexion.
    • * Innervated by lower cervical nerves (C6–C8).

Following answers are created by ChatGPT. Occasionally the answer may be harmful, incorrect, false, misleading, incomplete, or limited in knowledge of world. Please contact your doctor for all healthcare decisions. Also, double check the answer provided by the AI below.

Please login to access this content.

Don't have an account?

Start Your Free trial

No credit card information needed.

Anatomy Atlases and Descriptions

Related Videos