• ABSTRACT
    • Twenty-four adult cadavers (48 sides) were used to investigate the incidence of a branch arising from the ventral ramus of the fourth cervical nerve (C4) with the phrenic nerve and subsequently joining the brachial plexus. Six brachial plexuses with spinal cords and phrenic nerves were dissected under a surgical microscope to investigate localization of fibers contained in the C4 branch to the brachial plexus. The incidence of the C4 branch was 23% (11/48 sides). Branches from C4 to the brachial plexus divided into anterior and posterior divisions on four sides (4/6 sides). On two sides, the branch did not divide but consisted entirely of an anterior division (2/6 sides). In the brachial plexus, anterior division fibers of the C4 branch were intertwined with fibers from the anterior divisions of the ventral rami of the fifth and sixth cervical nerves. They then passed to the suprascapular nerve and the anterior division of the superior trunk (6/6 sides). On the other hand, posterior division fibers of the C4 branch were intertwined with fibers from the posterior divisions of the ventral rami of the fifth and sixth cervical nerves. They then passed to the suprascapular nerve (2/6 sides) and the posterior division of the superior trunk (4/6 sides). The anterior division of the C4 branch received fibers from the ventral rootlets of the entire fourth cervical segment, whereas the posterior division received fibers from the ventral rootlets of the caudal half of the fourth cervical segment only. The fact that the suprascapular nerve received fibers from both the anterior and posterior divisions of the C4 branch was considered to support our claim that the human suprascapular nerve belongs to both the anterior and posterior divisions of the brachial plexus.