Nerves of Lower Limb

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Lumbar Plexus - Thigh's Front Wires

  • Origin: Ventral rami L1-L4 (± T12, L5); forms in psoas major muscle.
  • Key Nerves (Anterior/Medial Thigh):
    • Femoral n. (L2,L3,L4): Knee extension (quadriceps), hip flexion. Sensory: anterior thigh, medial leg/foot (saphenous nerve).
    • Obturator n. (L2,L3,L4): Adductor muscles. Sensory: medial thigh.
    • Lateral Femoral Cutaneous n. (L2,L3): Sensory: lateral thigh.
  • 📌 Mnemonic (Femoral/Obturator roots): L2,3,4 keeps the leg off the floor! Lumbar plexus diagram with divisions

⭐ Femoral nerve injury presents with weak knee extension (e.g., difficulty climbing stairs), absent patellar reflex, and sensory loss over the anterior thigh and medial leg/foot.

Sacral Plexus - Back & Below's Network

  • Roots: Ventral rami of L4, L5, S1, S2, S3, S4.
  • Location: Anterior to piriformis muscle, on posterior pelvic wall.
  • Key Nerves & Supply (motor focus):
    • Sciatic (L4-S3): Posterior thigh, all leg & foot muscles.
      • Tibial division
      • Common Peroneal (Fibular) division
    • Superior Gluteal (L4-S1): Gluteus medius, minimus, TFL.
    • Inferior Gluteal (L5-S2): Gluteus maximus.
    • Pudendal (S2-S4): Perineum.
    • Posterior Femoral Cutaneous (S1-S3): Skin of posterior thigh & leg.

Sacral Plexus Anatomy and Nerve Distribution

⭐ Injury to the Superior Gluteal Nerve causes a positive Trendelenburg sign (pelvic tilt to unsupported side).

Femoral & Obturator Nerves - Thigh's Control Combo

  • Femoral Nerve (L2, L3, L4):
    • Largest lumbar plexus branch; supplies anterior thigh.
    • Motor: Quadriceps femoris, Sartorius, Pectineus, Iliacus.
    • Action: Hip flexion, Knee extension.
    • Sensory: Anterior thigh, medial leg & foot (Saphenous nerve).
    • Injury: ↓Knee extension, ↓Patellar reflex, sensory loss.
  • Obturator Nerve (L2, L3, L4):
    • Through obturator foramen; supplies medial thigh.
    • Motor: Adductor muscles (Longus, Brevis, Magnus part), Gracilis, Obturator externus.
    • Action: Thigh adduction.
    • Sensory: Medial thigh.
    • Injury: ↓Thigh adduction, sensory loss, wide gait.
  • 📌 Mnemonic (Roots L2,L3,L4): Femoral "kicks the door" (knee extension); Obturator "adducts some more".

⭐ Obturator nerve injury can cause referred pain to the knee joint due to shared articular branches (Hilton's Law). Femoral and Obturator Nerves in Thighoka

Sciatic Nerve - Leg's Main Cable

  • Origin: Sacral plexus (L4, L5, S1, S2, S3); body's largest nerve.
  • Path: Exits pelvis via greater sciatic foramen (inferior to piriformis). Descends posterior thigh.
  • Division: Splits into Tibial & Common Peroneal nerves (popliteal fossa apex).
  • Motor (pre-division): Hamstrings (semitendinosus, semimembranosus, biceps femoris long head), adductor magnus (hamstring part).
  • Clinical: Sciatica, piriformis syndrome. Sciatic nerve and branches in posterior thigh

⭐ The sciatic nerve is functionally two nerves (tibial and common peroneal) bundled in a common sheath.

Tibial & Common Peroneal Nerves - Foot's Fine Tuners

Fibular and Tibial Nerves of the Lower Leg and Foot

Sciatic N. (L4-S3) divides in popliteal fossa:

  • Tibial Nerve (L4-S3):

    • Motor: Post. leg compartment (plantarflexion, inversion); intrinsic foot muscles.
    • Sensory: Sole of foot.
    • Clinical: Tarsal tunnel syndrome; injury → cannot stand on tiptoes.
    • 📌 TIP: Tibial Inverts & Plantarflexes.
  • Common Peroneal (Fibular) Nerve (L4-S2):

    • Around fibular neck (vulnerable!).
    • Superficial Peroneal N.:
      • Motor: Lateral leg compartment (eversion).
      • Sensory: Anterolateral leg, foot dorsum.
    • Deep Peroneal N.:
      • Motor: Anterior leg compartment (dorsiflexion).
      • Sensory: 1st dorsal web space.
    • Clinical: Foot drop, steppage gait.
    • 📌 PED: Peroneal Everts & Dorsiflexes.

⭐ The Common Peroneal Nerve is the most commonly injured nerve in the lower limb, often at the neck of the fibula.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Femoral nerve (L2-L4) injury: weak knee extension, loss of patellar reflex, sensory loss anterior thigh/medial leg.
  • Obturator nerve (L2-L4) injury: weak thigh adduction, sensory loss medial thigh.
  • Sciatic nerve (L4-S3): supplies posterior thigh; tibial branch for plantarflexion/inversion, common peroneal for dorsiflexion/eversion.
  • Common peroneal nerve injury (fibular neck): classic foot drop, sensory loss dorsum of foot.
  • Superior gluteal nerve injury: Trendelenburg gait (weak abductors: gluteus medius/minimus).
  • Inferior gluteal nerve injury: weak hip extension (gluteus maximus), difficulty climbing stairs.

Practice Questions: Nerves of Lower Limb

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All the following nerves are involved in entrapment neuropathy except -

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Flashcards: Nerves of Lower Limb

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The _____ nerve splits into the common peroneal/fibular nerve and the tibial nerve

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The _____ nerve splits into the common peroneal/fibular nerve and the tibial nerve

sciatic

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