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Superior transverse scapular ligament

Superior transverse scapular ligament
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Capsule of shoulder-joint (distended). Anterior aspect. (Superior transverse ligament visible at upper right.)
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The left shoulder and acromioclavicular joints, and the proper ligaments of the scapula.
Details
From coracoid process
To suprascapular notch
Identifiers
Latin ligamentum transversum scapulae superius
Dorlands
/Elsevier
l_09/12493458
TA A03.5.01.003
FMA 25950
Anatomical terminology
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The superior transverse ligament (transverse or suprascapular ligament) converts the scapular notch into a foramen or opening.

It is a thin and flat fascicle, narrower at the middle than at the extremities, attached by one end to the base of the coracoid process and by the other to the medial end of the scapular notch.

The suprascapular nerve runs through the foramen; the transverse scapular vessels cross over the ligament.

The ligament can become ossified and impinge the underlying suprascapular nerve. This may cause paralysis of both supraspinatus and infraspinatus muscles.

This article incorporates text in the public domain from the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)




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