English: Dermatomes of the Upper Parts of the Body
(Modified, from Fender, after Foerster)
A dermatome is an area of skin supplied by the
dorsal (sensory) root of a spinal nerve.
The dermatomes were determined by plotting (a) the
areas of vasodilation that resulted on stimulation of
individual dorsal nerve roots, and (b) the areas of
"remaining sensibility" after cutting three roots above
and three roots below a given nerve root. The areas
plotted represent the average finding for each dorsal
root based on pain sensation. Areas determined for
temperature sensation have similar limits, but those for
touch are more extensive.
Note that there is considerable overlapping of con-
tiguous dermatomes; that is to say, each segmental
nerve overlaps the territories of its neighbours. As a
result, no anesthesia results unless two or more con-
secutive dorsal roots have lost their functions.
The 7th cervical dermatome (not depicted) begins
lower on the upper arm than the 6th and includes most,
or all, of the hand.
Tarix
Mənbə
An atlas of anatomy, / by regions 1962
Müəllif
Grant, John Charles Boileau
Lisenziya
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse
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