Abstract

BackgroundUnderstanding muscle and tendon anatomy is of tremendous importance to achieve optimal surgical execution and results in tendon transfers around the shoulder. The aim of this study was to introduce and describe an additional distal muscle slip of the teres major (TM).MethodsSixteen fresh-frozen cadaver shoulders were dissected with the deltopectoral approach. The ventral latissimus dorsi (LD) tendon was harvested, and the shoulders were analyzed for the presence/absence of a distal teres major slip (dTMs) and its dimensions and relationship with the TM and LD tendons.ResultsThe dTMs was identified in 12 shoulders (75%). It was always distal to the TM tendon and visible during the deltopectoral approach. There was a clear separation between the TM proximally and dTMs tendon distally. At the humeral insertion, both tendons had a common epimyseal sheet around the teres major and inserted continuously at the humerus. The mean width of the dTMs tendon at the insertion was 13 ± 4 mm (range, 7–22 mm). The total lengths of the dTMs tendon and LD tendon were 40 ± 7 mm (range, 25–57 mm) and 69 ± 7 mm (range, 57–79 mm), respectively (p < 0.001). The dTMs muscle showed direct adhesions in ten shoulders (83%) with the LD muscle.ConclusionsThis is the first macroscopic description of an additional distal slip of the teres major muscle. The dTMs has a separate (distal) but continuous (mediolateral) insertion at the humerus within a common epimyseal sheet around the TM. The dTMs tendon is visible during the deltopectoral approach and can therefore provide a lead structure, particularly in ventral LD transfers with the deltopectoral approach.

Highlights

  • Understanding muscle and tendon anatomy is of tremendous importance to achieve optimal surgical execution and results in tendon transfers around the shoulder

  • After the latissimus dorsi (LD) tendon was separated from the underlying teres major (TM) at its site of humeral insertion, the LD tendon was harvested to obtain a full view of the TM insertion

  • Other than the previously described TM accessorius [16], which lies proximally, the described additional head is located distal to the TM. This distal teres major slip was identified in 75% of our shoulder specimens, and its presence was defined by a distinct and separate bony insertion distal to the tendon insertion of the TM

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding muscle and tendon anatomy is of tremendous importance to achieve optimal surgical execution and results in tendon transfers around the shoulder. The aim of this study was to introduce and describe an additional distal muscle slip of the teres major (TM). For all tendon transfers around the shoulder, an anatomical understanding of the tendon insertions and relationship between each other is of tremendous importance. Several authors have studied the relationship between LD and TM, the insertion variants of the tendons [7, 10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18], and described different anatomic variants of TM [19,20,21,22,23,24]. An additional strand of muscle fibers proximal to TM was observed and named as the TM accessorius [16]

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