- Source: Coccygeal plexus
The coccygeal plexus is a small nervous plexus upon the pelvic (anterior) surface of the coccygeus muscle.
This plexus is formed by the ventral rami of the fourth and fifth sacral nerves (S4-S5), and the ventral ramus of the coccygeal nerve (Co). The relative contributions of S4 and S5 are minor and major, respectively. The coccygeal plexus gives rise to the anococcygeal nerve.
The coccygeal plexus is distributed to the coccygeus muscle, part of the levator ani muscle, the sacrococcygeal symphysis, and (via the anococcygeal nerve) a small area of skin between the tip of the coccyx, and the anus.
See also
Coccydynia (coccyx pain, tailbone pain)
Ganglion impar
Sacral plexus
Anococcygeal nerve
Coccyx
Levator ani muscle
Coccygeus muscle
References
External links
Description at uams.edu Archived 2007-01-11 at the Wayback Machine
Coccyx pain (tailbone pain, coccydynia) (Peer-reviewed medical chapter, available free online at eMedicine)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Muladara
- Coccygeal plexus
- Nerve plexus
- Spinal nerve
- Sacral plexus
- Anococcygeal nerve
- Lumbosacral plexus
- Pelvic splanchnic nerves
- Pudendal plexus (nerves)
- Muladhara
- Kundalini