Pectineus muscle

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Pectineus muscle
Pectineus.png
Upper thigh muscles of man
origin
Pubic bone ( pecten ossis pubis , tuberculum pubicum , lig. Pubicum sup. )
approach
Thigh bone ( linea pectinea or labium mediale )
function
Hip joint flexor , adduction
Innervation
Femoral nerve , obturator nerve
Spinal segments
L2, L3

The pectineus muscle ( Latin for "comb muscle") is a muscle on the inside of the thigh . In animals, it limits the thigh triangle ( Trigonum femorale ) from behind. The pectineus muscle is united with the adductor longus muscle in ungulates and is part of the upper shell . Occasionally the fusion with the adductor longus muscle is also found in dogs .

The muscle flexes the hip joint , pulls the thigh toward the center of the body (adduction), and helps twist it outward. It is innervated by the femoral nerve and the anterior branch ( ramus anterior ) of the obturator nerve , which originate in the spinal cord segments L2 – L3 and L2 – L4.

See also

literature

  • Franz-Viktor Salomon: muscle tissue . In: Anatomy for veterinary medicine . 2nd ext. Edition. Enke, Stuttgart 2008, ISBN 978-3-8304-1075-1 , pp. 147-234.