Upper Limb Fascia - The Body's Tupperware
- Axillary Fascia: Forms the axilla floor, blending with pectoral and brachial fascia.
- Brachial Fascia (Arm): A deep fascial sleeve creating two compartments via intermuscular septa:
- Anterior: Flexors (Biceps, Brachialis, Coracobrachialis).
- Posterior: Extensors (Triceps).
- Antebrachial Fascia (Forearm): Encases forearm muscles; continuous with brachial fascia.
⭐ Compartment Syndrome: A surgical emergency common in the forearm due to its tight fascial boundaries, risking neurovascular compromise from swelling.

Arm Compartments - Flex vs. Extend

-
Anterior (Flexor) Compartment
- Muscles: Biceps brachii, Brachialis, Coracobrachialis.
- 📌 Mnemonic: Buy Big Cars.
- Innervation: Musculocutaneous nerve (C5-C7).
- Artery: Brachial artery.
- Function: Flexes elbow & supinates forearm.
-
Posterior (Extensor) Compartment
- Muscles: Triceps brachii.
- Innervation: Radial nerve (C5-T1).
- Artery: Profunda brachii artery (deep brachial).
- Function: Extends elbow.
⭐ Clinical Pearl: Mid-shaft humeral fractures risk injuring the radial nerve in the radial groove, leading to paralysis of extensors ("wrist drop").
Forearm Compartments - Grip & Go
Two primary fascial compartments separated by the interosseous membrane and lateral intermuscular septum.
| Feature | Anterior (Flexor-Pronator) | Posterior (Extensor-Supinator) |
|---|---|---|
| Muscles | Superficial & deep groups. Flexors of wrist/digits, pronators. | Superficial & deep groups. Extensors of wrist/digits, supinator. |
| Innervation | Median & Ulnar Nerves | Radial Nerve (deep branch) |
| Artery | Ulnar & Radial Arteries | Posterior Interosseous Artery |
| Function | Wrist flexion, finger flexion, pronation. | Wrist extension, finger extension, supination. |
- Superficial: Pronator Teres, Flexor Carpi Radialis, Palmaris Longus, Flexor Carpi Ulnaris.
- 📌 Mnemonic: **P**ass **F**ail **P**ass **F**ail (from lateral to medial).
- Intermediate: Flexor Digitorum Superficialis.
- Deep: Flexor Digitorum Profundus, Flexor Pollicis Longus, Pronator Quadratus.
⭐ Compartment Syndrome: The earliest and most common sign is pain disproportionate to injury, especially with passive stretch of the digits. Paresthesia is a later sign. Pulselessness is a very late finding.
Hand & Clinical Spaces - Danger Zones

-
Key Spaces & Infection Routes:
- Thenar Space: Lateral aspect; infections from index finger.
- Midpalmar Space: Central; infections from middle/ring fingers.
- Space of Parona: Deep wrist space; potential for proximal spread to forearm.
-
Infectious Tenosynovitis:
- 📌 Kanavel's Signs (FLEX):
- Finger held in slight flexion.
- Length of tendon sheath is tender.
- Enlarged finger (fusiform swelling).
- Xtension (passive) causes pain.
- 📌 Kanavel's Signs (FLEX):
⭐ Horseshoe Abscess: Infection can spread from the little finger (ulnar bursa) to the thumb (radial bursa) via the communicating Space of Parona.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Fascial compartments of the upper limb separate anterior (flexor) and posterior (extensor) muscle groups.
- Compartment syndrome, a surgical emergency, results from increased intracompartmental pressure, leading to ischemia.
- Arm: The anterior compartment is innervated by the musculocutaneous nerve; the posterior by the radial nerve.
- Forearm: The anterior compartment is primarily supplied by the median nerve; the posterior by the radial nerve.
- Severe forearm compartment syndrome can cause Volkmann's ischemic contracture, a permanent flexion deformity.
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