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Erschienen in: Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy 10/2022

25.09.2022 | Original Article

A prevalence study of the atlantomastoid muscle

verfasst von: Rebecca Lee, Stephen C. Pang, William H. Borman, Sean O. Herrin, Logan S. W. Bale

Erschienen in: Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy | Ausgabe 10/2022

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Abstract

Purpose

To contribute to the documentation and consideration of the prevalence of the atlantomastoid muscle in humans.

Methods

Sixty formalin-fixed cadaveric sides were dissected for the presence of the atlantomastoid muscle (2 sides per donor). Laterality, origin, insertion, and other observable characteristics of the variant were recorded along with donor sex for comparative analyses.

Results

The atlantomastoid muscle was observed in nine sides (15%): two left side only, three right side only, and 2 bilaterally. The origin of the muscle was consistent from the transverse process of the atlas, lateral to both the insertion of obliquus capitis inferior and the origin of obliquus capitis superior. In one instance, the origin of atlantomastoid was continuous with the most superior tendinous slip of levator scapulae. The insertion of each atlantomastoid variant was the mastoid process, however, the precise location was variable.

Conclusion

The atlantomastoid muscle is a common accessory muscle of the suboccipital region; the muscle was present in 15% of the cadaveric sides dissected in this study. Despite the notable prevalence of atlantomastoid muscles, there is little current literature dedicated to its study. Here, we document the first new information related to the prevalence of atlantomastoid since 1964 and discuss the development and potential clinical significance of the muscle.
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Metadaten
Titel
A prevalence study of the atlantomastoid muscle
verfasst von
Rebecca Lee
Stephen C. Pang
William H. Borman
Sean O. Herrin
Logan S. W. Bale
Publikationsdatum
25.09.2022
Verlag
Springer Paris
Erschienen in
Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy / Ausgabe 10/2022
Print ISSN: 0930-1038
Elektronische ISSN: 1279-8517
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00276-022-03022-6

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