Deep cervical artery

Deep cervical artery

Costocervical trunk with branches. Right side.
Details
Source costocervical trunk
Vein deep cervical vein
Identifiers
Latin arteria cervicalis profunda
Dorlands
/Elsevier
a_61/12153837
TA A12.2.08.060
FMA 10659

Anatomical terminology

The deep cervical artery (Profunda cervicalis) is an artery of the neck.

Course

It arises, in most cases, from the costocervical trunk, and is analogous to the posterior branch of an aortic intercostal artery: occasionally it is a separate branch from the subclavian artery.

Passing backward, above the eighth cervical nerve and between the transverse process of the seventh cervical vertebra and the neck of the first rib, it runs up the back of the neck, between the semispinalis capitis and semispinalis cervicis, as high as the axis vertebra, supplying these and adjacent muscles, and anastomosing with the deep division of the descending branch of the occipital, and with branches of the vertebral.

It gives off a spinal twig which enters the canal through the intervertebral foramen between the seventh cervical and first thoracic vertebrae.

References

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



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