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Nerve: Cervical plexus
Gray784
Dermatome distribution of the trigeminal nerve (Superficial cervical plexus visible in purple, at center bottom.)
[[Image:|250px|center|]]
Latin plexus cervicalis
Gray's subject #210 925
Innervates
From C1-C4
To
MeSH [1]

The cervical plexus is a plexus of the ventral rami of the first four cervical spinal nerves which are located from C1 to C4 cervical segment in the neck. They are located laterally to the transverse processes between prevertebral muscles from the medial side and vertebral (m.scalenus, m.levator scapulae, m.splenius cervicis) from lateral side. Here there is anastomosis with accessory nerve, hypoglossal nerve and sympathetic trunk.

It is located in the neck, deep to sternocleidomastoid. Nerves formed from the cervical plexus innervate the back of the head, as well as some neck muscles. The branches of the cervical plexus emerge from the posterior triangle at the nerve point, a point which lies midway on the posterior border of the Sternocleidomastoid.

Branches[]

Has three types of branches: cutaneous, muscular, and mixed.

Diagram[]

Cervical plexus

Additional images[]

External links[]

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