Intro to Neuro-Variations - Blueprint Oddities
- Neuro-variations: Deviations from typical nervous system anatomy.
- Variation: Common, usually asymptomatic (e.g., variant nerve branching).
- Anomaly: Rare, often symptomatic, potentially impairing function (e.g., agenesis of corpus callosum).
- Etiology:
- Genetic: Mutations, chromosomal disorders.
- Environmental: Teratogens (infections, drugs, radiation).
- Developmental: Issues in neurulation, cell migration, or apoptosis.
- Impact: Can be incidental findings or cause significant neurological deficits.

⭐ Variations in the Circle of Willis are common (up to 50% of individuals), affecting cerebral collateral circulation.
CNS Anomalies - Brain & Cord Quirks
- Neural Tube Defects (NTDs): Failed closure; ↑AFP (except occulta).
- Anencephaly: No forebrain.
- Encephalocele: Brain/meninges herniation via skull defect.
- Spina Bifida:
- Occulta: Vertebral defect, hair tuft.
- Meningocele: Meninges herniate.
- Myelomeningocele: Cord + meninges herniate.
- Forebrain Anomalies:
- Holoprosencephaly (HPE): Midline defect (Trisomy 13). Alobar (severe) to lobar.
- Agenesis of Corpus Callosum (ACC): "Bat-wing" ventricles.

- Posterior Fossa:
- Arnold-Chiari Malformations:
- Type I: Tonsils >5mm below foramen magnum.
- Type II: Tonsils, vermis herniation + myelomeningocele.
- Dandy-Walker: Cystic 4th ventricle, vermian agenesis/hypoplasia.
- Arnold-Chiari Malformations:
- Spinal Cord:
- Syringomyelia: Syrinx in cord; "cape-like" sensory loss.
⭐ Arnold-Chiari Type II malformation is almost invariably associated with lumbar myelomeningocele.
PNS Deviations - Nerve Pathway Puzzles
- Brachial Plexus Variations:
- Prefixation (C4 input) or Postfixation (T2 input) alters segmental levels.
- Variations in divisions, cords, terminal branch origins (e.g., musculocutaneous n.).
- Accessory phrenic nerve: from C5/ansa cervicalis, joins main phrenic.
- Lumbosacral Plexus Variations:
- Prefixation (L4 to sciatic n.) or Postfixation (S1 to common peroneal n.).
- Furcal nerve (L4): "Nerve of Furstenberg", links lumbar & sacral plexuses.
- Sciatic nerve: variable division level into tibial & common peroneal nerves.
- Anomalous Nerve Communications:
- Martin-Gruber (MGA): Median n. → Ulnar n. (forearm). 📌 "Median Gives to Ulnar"
⭐ MGA: 15-30% incidence; may preserve some intrinsic hand function after ulnar nerve injury.
- Marinacci: Ulnar n. → Median n. (forearm, reverse MGA).
- Riche-Cannieu: Ulnar (deep br.) ↔ Median (recurrent br.) in palm.
- Martin-Gruber (MGA): Median n. → Ulnar n. (forearm). 📌 "Median Gives to Ulnar"
- Other Variations:
- Accessory obturator nerve: ~10-30%; relevant for nerve blocks.
- Sural nerve: variable formation from tibial/common peroneal nerves.

Clinical Impacts - Symptom Spotting
- Many variations asymptomatic. Symptoms from: compression, altered pathways, ischemia.
- Compression Syndromes:
- TOS: Cervical rib/accessory scalenes → neurovascular bundle compression (arm pain, paresthesia).
- CN Syndromes: Vascular loops → Trigeminal Neuralgia (CN V), Hemifacial Spasm (CN VII).
- Piriformis Syndrome: Sciatic nerve variant & piriformis → buttock pain/sciatica.
- Carpal Tunnel Syndrome: ↑Risk with persistent median artery, bifid median nerve.
- Altered Innervation (📌 MGA/RCA):
- Martin-Gruber (MGA): Median→Ulnar (forearm).
- Riche-Cannieu (RCA): Ulnar→Median (hand).
- Result: Atypical nerve injury patterns, EMG challenges.
- Accessory phrenic: Diaphragm innervation concerns.
- Clinical Significance:
- Mimic pathology → misdiagnosis.
- Surgical planning vital: avoid iatrogenic injury (e.g., recurrent laryngeal nerve), note altered landmarks.
⭐ Circle of Willis variations (common, up to 50%) affect stroke collateral flow & aneurysm risk.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Brachial plexus: Prefixed (C4) and postfixed (T2) variations are common.
- Lumbosacral plexus: Similar prefixed and postfixed patterns occur.
- Circle of Willis: Posterior communicating artery frequently hypoplastic or absent.
- Vertebral artery: Variations in origin, course (e.g., arcuate foramen), and termination.
- Sciatic nerve: High division into tibial and common peroneal nerves is notable.
- Median nerve: Variable root contributions from brachial plexus cords during formation.
- Accessory phrenic nerve: May arise from ansa cervicalis or C5 root, impacting surgery.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app