Preferred Label : costo-cervical trunk;
Uberon definition : The costocervical trunk arises from the upper and back part of the subclavian artery,
behind the scalenus anterior on the right side, and medial to that muscle on the left
side. Passing backward, it splits into the deep cervical artery and the supreme intercostal
artery (or the Highest intercostal artery), which descends behind the pleura in front
of the necks of the first and second ribs, and anastomoses with the first aortic intercostal
(3rd posterior intercostal artery). As it crosses the neck of the first rib it lies
medial to the anterior division of the first thoracic nerve, and lateral to the first
thoracic ganglion of the sympathetic trunk. In the first intercostal space, it gives
off a branch which is distributed in a manner similar to the distribution of the aortic
intercostals. The branch for the second intercostal space usually joins with one from
the highest aortic intercostal artery. This branch is not constant, but is more commonly
found on the right side; when absent, its place is supplied by an intercostal branch
from the aorta. Each intercostal gives off a posterior branch which goes to the posterior
vertebral muscles, and sends a small spinal branch through the corresponding intervertebral
foramen to the medulla spinalis and its membranes. [WP,unvetted].;
Uberon synonym : costocervical trunk; trunk of costocervical artery;
Origin ID : 0004688;
Currated CISMeF NLP mapping
See also inter- (CISMeF)
Uberon cross reference
has branching part
has part
The costocervical trunk arises from the upper and back part of the subclavian artery,
behind the scalenus anterior on the right side, and medial to that muscle on the left
side. Passing backward, it splits into the deep cervical artery and the supreme intercostal
artery (or the Highest intercostal artery), which descends behind the pleura in front
of the necks of the first and second ribs, and anastomoses with the first aortic intercostal
(3rd posterior intercostal artery). As it crosses the neck of the first rib it lies
medial to the anterior division of the first thoracic nerve, and lateral to the first
thoracic ganglion of the sympathetic trunk. In the first intercostal space, it gives
off a branch which is distributed in a manner similar to the distribution of the aortic
intercostals. The branch for the second intercostal space usually joins with one from
the highest aortic intercostal artery. This branch is not constant, but is more commonly
found on the right side; when absent, its place is supplied by an intercostal branch
from the aorta. Each intercostal gives off a posterior branch which goes to the posterior
vertebral muscles, and sends a small spinal branch through the corresponding intervertebral
foramen to the medulla spinalis and its membranes. [WP,unvetted].