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Anatomy of the axillary arch: from its incidence in human to an embryologic and a phylogenetic explanation of its origins

Authors :
Martin, Lhuaire
Karl, Wehbe
Ignacio, Garrido
Vincent, Hunsinger
Mohamed, Derder
Vincent, Balaya
Vincent, Delmas
Peter, Abrahams
Daniele, Sommacale
Reza, Kianmanesh
Christian, Fontaine
Laurent, Lantieri
Source :
Surgical and radiologic anatomy : SRA. 43(5)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Typically, the axillary arch is defined as a fleshy slip running from latissimus dorsi to the anterior aspect of the humerus. Phylogeny seems to give the most relevant and plausible explanation of this anatomical variant as a remnant of the panniculus carnosus. However, authors are not unanimous about its origin. We report herein the incidence of axillary arch in a series of 40 human female dissections and present an embryologic and a comparative study in three domestic mammals.Forty formalin-preserved Caucasian human female cadavers, one rat (Rattus norvegicus), one rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) and one pig (Sus scrofa domesticus) cadavers were dissected bilaterally. A comparative, analytical and a descriptive studies of serial human embryological sections were carried out.We found an incidence of axillary arch of 2.5% (n = 1 subject of 40) in Humans. We found a panniculus carnosus inserted on the anterior aspect of the humerus only in the rat and the rabbit but not in the pig. The development of the latissimus dorsi takes place between Carnegie stage 16-23, but the embryological study failed to explain the genesis of the axillary arch variation. However, comparative anatomy argues in favour of a panniculus carnosus origin of the axillary arch.With an incidence of 2.5% of cases, the axillary arch is a relatively frequent variant that should be known by clinician and especially surgeons. Moreover, while embryology seems to fail to explain the genesis of this variation, comparative study gives additional arguments which suggest a possible origin from the panniculus carnosus.

Details

ISSN :
12798517
Volume :
43
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Surgical and radiologic anatomy : SRA
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........74221db9e5a1111cb1e3d3db9270f78e