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Thoracolumbar fascia

Thoracolumbar fascia
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Diagram of a transverse section of the posterior abdominal wall, to show the disposition of the lumbodorsal fascia.
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Superficial muscles of the back. The thoracolumbar fascia is the gray area at bottom center.
Details
Identifiers
Latin fascia thoracolumbalis, fascia lumbodorsalis
Dorlands
/Elsevier
f_03/12355635
TA A04.3.02.501
FMA 25072
Anatomical terminology
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The thoracolumbar fascia (lumbodorsal fascia or thoracodorsal fascia) is a deep investing membrane throughout most of the posterior thorax and abdomen although it is a thin fibrous lamina in the thoracic region. Above, it is continuous with a similar investing layer on the back of the neck—the nuchal fascia.

It is formed of longitudinal and transverse fibers that bridge the aponeuroses of internal oblique and transversalis, costal angles and iliac crest laterally, to the vertebral column and sacrum medially. In doing so, they cover the paravertebral muscles.

It is made up of three layers, anterior, middle, and posterior. The anterior and middle layers insert onto the transverse processes of the vertebral column while the posterior layer inserts onto the tips of the spinous processes, hence it is indirectly continuous with the interspinous ligaments.

The anterior layer is the thinnest and the posterior layer is the thickest. Two spaces are formed between these three layers of the fascia.

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



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