Pudendal Nerve: Difference between revisions

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|innervates=Muscles of the perineum, skin of penis, clitoris, most of the perineum
|innervates=Muscles of the perineum, skin of penis, clitoris, most of the perineum
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==Innervation of the Perineum==
[[File:Perineum innervation Trescot.png|thumb|left|350px|Innervation of the perineum: A: [[Genitofemoral Nerve|genitofemoral nerve]]; B: [[Obturator Nerve|obturator nerve]]; C: [[Inferior Cluneal Nerve|inferior cluneal nerve]]; D: perineal branch of the [[Posterior Femoral Cutaneous Nerve|posterior femoral cutaneous nerve]]; E: [[Ilioinguinal Nerve|ilioinguinal nerve]]; F: [[Pudendal Nerve|pudendal nerve]]<br><small>Copyright Andrea Trescot<ref name="trescot">Trescot, Andrea. Peripheral nerve entrapments : clinical diagnosis and management. Switzerland: Springer, 2016.</ref></small>]]
{{Nerves of the lumbosacral plexus|state=collapsed}}
{{Nerves of the lumbosacral plexus|state=collapsed}}
==References==
{{#set:Has nerve group=Sacral Plexus}}

Latest revision as of 15:44, 9 April 2022

This article is a stub.
Pudendal nerve.jpeg
Pudendal Nerve
Nerve Type Mixed nerve
Origin S2, S3, S4
Sensory innervation Skin of penis, clitoris, most of the perineum
Motor innervation Muscles of the perineum

Innervation of the Perineum

Innervation of the perineum: A: genitofemoral nerve; B: obturator nerve; C: inferior cluneal nerve; D: perineal branch of the posterior femoral cutaneous nerve; E: ilioinguinal nerve; F: pudendal nerve
Copyright Andrea Trescot[1]

References

  1. โ†‘ Trescot, Andrea. Peripheral nerve entrapments : clinical diagnosis and management. Switzerland: Springer, 2016.