1/Raise your hand if you’re confused by the BRACHIAL PLEXUS!
I could never seem to remember or understand it—but now I do & I’ll show you how
A thread so you will never fear brachial plexus anatomy again!
2/Everyone has a mnemonic to remember brachial plexus anatomy.
I’m a radiologist, so I remember one about Rad Techs.
But just remembering the names & their order isn’t enough. That is just the starting point--let’s really understand it
3/From the mnemonic, we start with the roots—the cervical nerve roots.
I remember which roots make up the brachial plexus by remembering that it supplies the hand.
You have 5 fingers on your hand so we start with C5 & we take 5 nerve roots (C5-T1).
4/Next in the mnemonic are the Trunks.
Bc Trunks starts w/T, I can remember how they are named.
T is Top to bottom.
Trunks are named top to bottom: Superior, Middle, and Inferior.
But how to remember which nerve roots combine to give you which trunks?
5/Pairing of the nerve roots into the trunks is like pairing off at a dance when there is an odd number.
Everyone immediately turns to the person next to them & the person in the middle is left out.
For the roots, C7 is in the middle & has to go it alone as the middle trunk
6/Next in the mnemonic are the Divisions
Divisions do what their name implies—they divide the trunks.
Each trunk is split or DIVIDED into an anterior & posterior division.
Divisions will look like scissors coming off the trunks, helping you to remember they are splitting
7/This division results in a fundamental change in the nerves—anterior divisions will supply flexors & posterior divisions will supply the extensors.
It's an important dividing line. Like rabid soccer fans, once they've chosen a team, they will never mix w/fans of the other team
8/After the split of the divisions, the nerves come back together as the cords.
It is kind of like doing jumping jacks—they open up and then close back up again.
I remember that they come back together as the Cords bc Cords and Combine both start with C
9/It’s like a toll road
The road widens to let more cars get to the toll booths. Once they have paid the toll, road narrows again
This is what happens w/the divisions—but instead of paying a toll, they are organizing into flexor & extensor groups & coming back together again.
10/But it’s more like going through a worm hole than toll booth
When you go through a wormhole, you are fundamentally changed when you come out the other side (or so I read on the internet)
Once cords emerge from divisions, they’re either team flexor or extensor & can’t go back
11/So when they form the cords, anterior divisions (team flexor) will only combine w/other anterior divisions that innervate flexors.
Similarly, posterior divisions (team extensor) will only combine with other posterior divisions (extensor group).
12/Divisions combine to form 2 ant. cords & 1 post. cord. Why the inequality?
Well, the fundamental purpose of the arm is to flex (pick up things), unlike the leg (which is to extend/stand up).
So bc it’s more important to flex, remember 2 cords to flexors & 1 to extensors
13/All post divisions go to the 1 post cord. How do you remember which ant divisions go into which cord?
Remember, divisions come from the sup, middle, & inf trunks. Superior or even middle class don’t combine w/inferior things. So sup & mid combine. Poor inferior is left alone
14/Names of the cords are based on their relationship to the axillary artery.
Posterior cord (extensors) is posterior to it. The flexor cord made of the superior & middle divisions is lateral. Flexor cord made from the lonely inferior division is medial
15/But this is hard to remember.
So I remember that the flexor cord made from the poor inf division is looked down upon, so it is given the worst seat—at the armpit.
In anatomic positioning, closest to the armpit is medial, so it's the medial cord.
16/Now the final division into branches. Remember posterior cord only supplies extensors & is the only extensor cord. So when it branches, it needs to innervate extensors all along the arm (elbow, forearm, hand). So it gives off axillary to the upper arm & radial to the lower arm
17/Now the branches of the flexor cords. As expected from their names, MEDIAL cord gives a branch for flexors/sensation to MEDIAL forearm/hand (in anatomic position = PINKY side, so ulnar nerve), & LATERAL cord gives a branch for motor/sensation to LAT. forearm (musculocutaneous)
18/Usually superior/middle class look down on inferiors (why inf division travels alone as medial cord). But eventually the rich will have, ahem, liaisons w/inferiors. So it is w/cords. High-class lateral cord finally mingles w/low-class armpit medial cord, making median nerve
19/Now move beyond mneumonics. Remember, brachial plexus splits & recombines like jumping jacks w/a very palindromic 5-3-6-3-5 pattern. The names tell you if they are splitting or combining (Trunk=Together, Division=Divide, Cord=Combine, Branch=break)
20/Now all you need is to recall 1 fact @ each stage
Trunk: C7 left out
Div: Ant flexors don’t mix w/post extensors
Cord: Sup/mid class don’t mix w/inferiors
Br: Each cord gives a branch to region its name describes (post, med, lat) &rich give in to inferiors to form median nerve
21/Now you understand the anatomy of the brachial plexus.
Hopefully, the next time someone has a question about brachial plexus anatomy, you will be the first to raise your hand and BRACH it down for them!
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1/Does your ability to remember temporal lobe anatomy seem, well, temporary?
Are you feeling temporally challenged when it comes to this complex region?
Here’s a thread to help you remember the structures of the temporal lobe!
2/Temporal lobe can be divided centrally & peripherally.
Centrally is the hippocampus.
It’s a very old part of the brain & is relatively well preserved going all the way back to rats. Its main function is memory—getting both rats & us through mazes—including the maze of life
3/Peripherally is the neocortex. Although rats also have neocortex, theirs is much different structurally than humans.
So I like to think of neocortex as providing the newer (neo) functions of the temporal lobes seen in humans: speech, language, visual processing/social cues
Brain MRI anatomy is best understood in terms of both form & function.
Here’s a short thread to help you to remember important functional brain anatomy--so you truly can clinically correlate!
2/Let’s start at the top. At the vertex is the superior frontal gyrus. This is easy to remember, bc it’s at the top—and being at the top is superior. It’s like the superior king at the top of the vertex.
3/It is also easy to recognize on imaging. It looks like a big thumb pointing straight up out of the brain. I always look for that thumbs up when I am looking for the superior frontal gyrus (SFG)
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When you see an aneurysm on imaging, do you know its risk of rupture?
Do you know which features make one aneurysm more likely to rupture?
Here’s a short thread to teach you which aneurysms are bursting with risk!
2/Aneurysm rupture is a devastating even, as it results in subarachnoid hemorrhage, which can then result in complications such as hydrocephalus, vasospasm, infarcts, and death
Preventing it by treating aneurysms before they rupture is key. But you also don’t want to over treat
3/To remember what features make an aneurysm more likely to rupture, think about the things that make that guy at the bar that you angered more likely to rupture & start a fight
What makes him more likely to rupture are the same things that make aneurysms more likely to rupture
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Are you hungry for a way to classify these patients?
DONUT you worry!
Here’s a short thread to help you remember the modified Fisher scale for classifying subarachnoid hemorrhage.
2/Just think of the brain as a donut.
Like a donut, it’s a bunch of stuff around a hole in the middle. Ventricles are the hole in the middle of the brain just like there’s a hole in the middle of the dough in a donut.
Just don’t quote me to your neuroanatomy professor….
3/Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) added to the brain makes it less healthy, the same way adding toppings to a donut makes it less healthy.
Increasing severity of SAH is like increasingly unhealthy donut toppings.
Modified Fisher quantifies the vasospasm risk for increasing SAH