Piriformis nerve

The piriformis nerve, also known as the nerve to piriformis is the peripheral nerve that innervates the piriformis muscle.

Piriformis nerve
Diagram of sacral plexus and pudendal plexus. (Label "to piriformis" is at center left.)
The piriformis and nearby muscles
Details
Fromsacral plexus (S1–S2)
Innervatespiriformis muscle
Identifiers
LatinNervus musculi piriformis
TA98A14.2.07.029
TA26545
FMA16509
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy

Structure

The piriformis nerve to piriformis originates from the ventral rami of S1 and S2 in the sacral plexus.[1] It enters the anterior surface of the piriformis muscle. This nerve may be double. This nerve is not to be confused with the inferior gluteal nerve, which also arises from posterior divisions of the first and second sacral ventral rami (S1, S2).

Function

The piriformis nerve innervates the piriformis muscle.[1]

See also

References

This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 957 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

  1. Pan, Jason; Vasudevan, John (2018-01-01), Freedman, Mitchell K.; Gehret, Jeffrey A.; Young, George W.; Kamen, Leonard B. (eds.), "Chapter 24 - Piriformis Syndrome: A Review of the Evidence and Proposed New Criteria for Diagnosis", Challenging Neuropathic Pain Syndromes, Elsevier, pp. 205–215, ISBN 978-0-323-48566-1, retrieved 2021-02-03

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