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Iliohypogastric nerve

Iliohypogastric nerve
Lumbar plexus.svg
Plan of lumbar plexus. (Iliohypogastric visible at upper left.)
Gray823.png
The lumbar plexus and its branches. (Iliohypogastric visible at upper left.)
Details
From lumbar plexus
Innervates Sensory: Skin over the lateral gluteal region and above the pubis
Motor: internal and transverse abdominal muscles
Identifiers
Latin Nervus iliohypogastricus
Dorlands
/Elsevier
n_05/12565885
TA A14.2.07.003
FMA 16482
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy
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The iliohypogastric nerve is a nerve that originates from the lumbar plexus that supplies sensation to skin over the lateral gluteal region and motor to the internal and transverse abdominal muscles.

The nerve emerges from the psoas major in the outer part of its upper border, and crosses in front of the quadratus lumborum to the iliac crest, running behind the kidneys. Near the crest of the ilium the iliohypogastric nerve then pierces through the transversus abdominis, and divides between that muscle and the internal oblique muscle into a lateral and an anterior cutaneous branch.

The iliohypogastric nerve originates from the superior branch of the anterior ramus of spinal nerve L1 after this nerve receives fibers from T12 via the subcostal nerve. The inferior branch is the ilioinguinal nerve. has two branches:

The lateral cutaneous branch ("iliac branch") pierces the internal and external oblique muscles immediately above the iliac crest, and is distributed to the skin of the gluteal region, behind the lateral cutaneous branch of the subcostal nerve; the size of this branch bears an inverse proportion to that of the lateral cutaneous branch of the subcostal nerve.

When harvesting bone from the anterior iliac crest (AICBG), the lateral cutaneous branch of the Iliohypogastric nerve (L1) is most likely to be injured.

Area supplied by the lateral cutaneous branch can be seen in blue near the hip.

The anterior cutaneous branch ("hypogastric branch") continues onward between the abdominal internal oblique and transverse muscles.

It then pierces the internal oblique, becomes cutaneous by perforating the aponeurosis of the external oblique about 2.5 cm. above the subcutaneous inguinal ring, and is distributed to the skin of the hypogastric region.


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