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Transverse scapular

Suprascapular artery
Thyrocervical trunk.png
Thyrocervical trunk with branches, including suprascapular artery.
Gray521.png
The scapular and circumflex arteries. (Transverse scapular visible at top.)
Details
Source Thyrocervical trunk
Vein Suprascapular vein
Supplies Supraspinatus muscle, (sternocleidomastoid), (subclavius)
Identifiers
Latin Arteria suprascapularis,
arteria transversa scapulae
Dorlands
/Elsevier
a_61/12156180
TA A12.2.08.051
FMA 10663
Anatomical terminology
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The suprascapular artery is a branch of the thyrocervical trunk.

At first, it passes downward and laterally across the scalenus anterior and phrenic nerve, being covered by the sternocleidomastoid muscle; it then crosses the subclavian artery and the brachial plexus, running behind and parallel with the clavicle and subclavius muscle and beneath the inferior belly of the omohyoid to the superior border of the scapula. It passes over the superior transverse scapular ligament (unlike the suprascapular nerve, which passes below the ligament).

The artery then enters the supraspinatous fossa of the scapula. It travels close to the bone, running between the scapula and the supraspinatus muscle, to which it supplies branches.

It then descends behind the neck of the scapula, through the great scapular notch and under cover of the inferior transverse ligament, to reach the infraspinatous fossa, where it anastomoses with the scapular circumflex artery and the descending branch of the transverse cervical artery.

Besides distributing branches to the sternocleidomastoid (which, however, mainly is supplied by the occipital artery and the superior thyroid artery), subclavius (which mainly is supplied by the thoracoacromial artery), and neighboring muscles, it gives off a suprasternal branch, which crosses over the sternal end of the clavicle to the skin of the upper part of the chest; and an acromial branch, which pierces the trapezius and supplies the skin over the acromion, anastomosing with the thoracoacromial artery. Just as with supplying the subclavius muscle, it anastomoses with the thoracoacromial artery in supplying skin areas.


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