Abstract

Background:Anatomic and clinical studies show many variants of the superficial peroneal nerve (SPN) course and branching within the compartments and at the suprafascial layer. The anatomy of the transition zone from the compartment to the subcutaneous layer has been occasionally described in the literature, mainly in studies reporting the intraseptal SPN variant in 6.6% to 13.6% of patients affected by the SPN entrapment syndrome. Despite the little evidence available, the knowledge of the transition zone is relevant to avoid iatrogenic lesions to the SPN during fasciotomy, open approaches to the leg and ankle, and SPN decompression. Our anatomic study aimed to describe the SPN transition site and to evaluate the occurrence of a peroneal tunnel and of an intraseptal SPN variant.Methods:According to the institutional ethics committee requirements, 15 fresh-frozen lower limbs were dissected to study the SPN course and its branching, focusing on the transition site to the suprafascial layer.Results:The SPN was located in the anterior compartment in 2 cases and in the lateral in 13. An intraseptal tunnel was present in 10 legs (66%), at a mean distance of 10.67 cm from the lateral malleolus. Its mean length was 2.63 cm. The tunnel allowed the passage of the main SPN in 8 cases and of its branches in two. In the remaining 5 legs (33%), the SPN pierced a crural fascia window.Conclusion:In our sample a higher rate than expected of intraseptal SPN variants was found.Clinical Relevance:The knowledge of the anatomy of the SPN course and intraseptal variant is relevant to avoid iatrogenic lesions during operative dissection. Further studies are needed to evaluate the effective prevalence of an intraseptal tunnel, independently from the SPN entrapment syndrome, and how to avoid associated iatrogenic complications.

Highlights

  • The superficial peroneal nerve (SPN) branches out from the common peroneal nerve within the peroneus longus muscle in the lateral compartment of the leg, distal to the proximal peroneal metaphysis.[11]

  • The MDCN and the intermediate dorsal cutaneous nerve (IDCN) branched from the SPN in the lateral compartment, and both nerves ran within 2 different tunnels in the septum

  • The exact prevalence of intraseptal variants is difficult to determine in the literature, as it might be overestimated in clinical studies focusing on SPN entrapment and underestimated in anatomic studies, which mainly focused on the branching of the SPN

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Summary

Introduction

The superficial peroneal nerve (SPN) branches out from the common peroneal nerve within the peroneus longus muscle in the lateral compartment of the leg, distal to the proximal peroneal metaphysis.[11] According to most of the anatomy textbooks,[11] the SPN courses in the lateral compartment, across the peroneus longus and peroneus brevis muscles, giving them motor branches. Anatomic and clinical studies show many variants of the superficial peroneal nerve (SPN) course and branching within the compartments and at the suprafascial layer. Further studies are needed to evaluate the effective prevalence of an intraseptal tunnel, independently from the SPN entrapment syndrome, and how to avoid associated iatrogenic complications

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