Report of a Novel Bilateral Variation of Sciatic and Inferior Gluteal Nerve: A Case Study

Introduction: The sciatic nerve is the thickest nerve of the sacral plexus which innervates many muscles and vast areas of the skin of the lower limb. It leaves the pelvis via the greater sciatic foramen, emerges into the gluteal region by passing under the piriformis muscle, and descends beneath th...

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Main Authors: Rahim Golmohammadi, Ali Delbari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Iran University of Medical Sciences 2021-05-01
Series:Basic and Clinical Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://bcn.iums.ac.ir/article-1-1530-en.html
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spelling doaj-0dc7965f2aca4d3b84b077ef66ea25f62021-08-16T11:28:31ZengIran University of Medical SciencesBasic and Clinical Neuroscience2008-126X2228-74422021-05-01123409414Report of a Novel Bilateral Variation of Sciatic and Inferior Gluteal Nerve: A Case StudyRahim Golmohammadi0Ali Delbari1 Department of Anatomical Sciences, Cellular and Molecular Research Center, School of Medicine, Sabzevar University of Medical Sciences, Sabzevar, Iran. Department of Anatomical Sciences, Cellular and Molecular Research Center, School of Medicine, Sabzevar University of Medical Sciences, Sabzevar, Iran. Introduction: The sciatic nerve is the thickest nerve of the sacral plexus which innervates many muscles and vast areas of the skin of the lower limb. It leaves the pelvis via the greater sciatic foramen, emerges into the gluteal region by passing under the piriformis muscle, and descends beneath the gluteus maximus to divide into its terminal branches; the tibial and common peroneal nerve at the superior angle of the popliteal fossa. In some cases, the sciatic nerve divides into the tibial and common peroneal nerves at a higher level and one of them or both passes through or over the piriformis muscle. Case Presentation: We find an interesting bilateral variation of sciatic nerve accompanying a very thick inferior gluteal nerve on the right side and unusual route and branching of tibial and common peroneal nerves on the left side. Conclusion: As in conditions like intramuscular injections, gluteal surgeries, and piriformis syndrome such variations may increase the risk of injury, it is important for the medical team to be aware of them. In this paper, by reporting many variations in a cadaver, we emphasize the importance of anatomical variations, especially for surgeons and nurses.http://bcn.iums.ac.ir/article-1-1530-en.htmlsciatic nerveinferior gluteal nerveanatomic variation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rahim Golmohammadi
Ali Delbari
spellingShingle Rahim Golmohammadi
Ali Delbari
Report of a Novel Bilateral Variation of Sciatic and Inferior Gluteal Nerve: A Case Study
Basic and Clinical Neuroscience
sciatic nerve
inferior gluteal nerve
anatomic variation
author_facet Rahim Golmohammadi
Ali Delbari
author_sort Rahim Golmohammadi
title Report of a Novel Bilateral Variation of Sciatic and Inferior Gluteal Nerve: A Case Study
title_short Report of a Novel Bilateral Variation of Sciatic and Inferior Gluteal Nerve: A Case Study
title_full Report of a Novel Bilateral Variation of Sciatic and Inferior Gluteal Nerve: A Case Study
title_fullStr Report of a Novel Bilateral Variation of Sciatic and Inferior Gluteal Nerve: A Case Study
title_full_unstemmed Report of a Novel Bilateral Variation of Sciatic and Inferior Gluteal Nerve: A Case Study
title_sort report of a novel bilateral variation of sciatic and inferior gluteal nerve: a case study
publisher Iran University of Medical Sciences
series Basic and Clinical Neuroscience
issn 2008-126X
2228-7442
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Introduction: The sciatic nerve is the thickest nerve of the sacral plexus which innervates many muscles and vast areas of the skin of the lower limb. It leaves the pelvis via the greater sciatic foramen, emerges into the gluteal region by passing under the piriformis muscle, and descends beneath the gluteus maximus to divide into its terminal branches; the tibial and common peroneal nerve at the superior angle of the popliteal fossa. In some cases, the sciatic nerve divides into the tibial and common peroneal nerves at a higher level and one of them or both passes through or over the piriformis muscle. Case Presentation: We find an interesting bilateral variation of sciatic nerve accompanying a very thick inferior gluteal nerve on the right side and unusual route and branching of tibial and common peroneal nerves on the left side. Conclusion: As in conditions like intramuscular injections, gluteal surgeries, and piriformis syndrome such variations may increase the risk of injury, it is important for the medical team to be aware of them. In this paper, by reporting many variations in a cadaver, we emphasize the importance of anatomical variations, especially for surgeons and nurses.
topic sciatic nerve
inferior gluteal nerve
anatomic variation
url http://bcn.iums.ac.ir/article-1-1530-en.html
work_keys_str_mv AT rahimgolmohammadi reportofanovelbilateralvariationofsciaticandinferiorglutealnerveacasestudy
AT alidelbari reportofanovelbilateralvariationofsciaticandinferiorglutealnerveacasestudy
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