Palmaris brevis muscle

 Palmaris brevis muscle is a thin, quadrilateral muscle, placed beneath the integument of the ulnar side of the hand. It acts to fold the skin of the hypothenar eminence transversally.

Palmaris brevis muscle
Musculuspalmarisbrevis.png
The muscles of the left hand. Palmar surface (palmaris brevis visible at center left).
Details
OriginFlexor retinaculum (medial) and palmar aponeurosis
InsertionPalm
ArteryPalmar metacarpal artery
NerveSuperficial branch of ulnar nerve
ActionsPulls on skin over hypothenar eminence, deepening the cup of the palm and so improving grip
Identifiers
LatinMusculus palmaris brevis
TA98A04.6.02.053
TA22520
FMA37381
Anatomical terms of muscle
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StructureEdit

Origin and insertionEdit

Palmaris brevis muscle is located on the ulnar side of the hand.[1][2] It arises from the tendinous fasciculi from the transverse carpal ligament and palmar aponeurosis. The muscle fibres are inserted into the skin on the ulnar border of the palm of the hand,[1] and occasionally on the pisiform bone.[3]

InnervationEdit

Palmaris brevis muscle is the only muscle innervated by the superficial branch of the ulnar nerve (C8, T1).[2]

Blood supplyEdit

Palmaris brevis muscle is supplied by the palmar metacarpal artery of the deep palmar arch.

FunctionEdit

Palmaris brevis muscle tenses the skin of the palm on the ulnar side during a grip action.[2][3] It also deepens the hollow of the palm.[4] The palmaris brevis may protect the ulnar nerve and ulnar artery from compressive forces during repetitive grasping actions.[5] The muscle has a fatigue-resistant fiber type profile, which supports the idea of a protective function to the ulnar neurovasculature during repetitive intermittent grasping tasks.[6]

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
.