The common peroneal nerve (common fibular nerve; external popliteal nerve; lateral popliteal nerve), about one-half the size of the tibial nerve, is derived from the dorsal branches of the fourth and fifth lumbar and the first and second sacral nerves.
It descends obliquely along the lateral side of the popliteal fossa to the head of the fibula, close to the medial margin of the biceps femoris muscle. Where the common peroneal nerve winds round the head of the fibula, it is palpable.[1]
Contents
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Structure 1
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Function 2
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Clinical significance 3
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Additional images 4
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See also 5
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References 6
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External links 7
Structure
It lies between the tendon of the biceps femoris and lateral head of the gastrocnemius muscle, winds around the neck of the fibula, between the peroneus longus and the bone, and divides beneath the muscle into the superficial peroneal nerve and deep peroneal nerve.
Branches
Previous to its division it gives off articular and lateral sural cutaneous nerves.
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The articular branches (rami articulares) are three in number:
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Two of these accompany the superior and inferior lateral genicular arteries to the knee; the upper one occasionally arises from the trunk of the sciatic nerve.
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The third (recurrent) articular nerve is given off at the point of division of the common peroneal nerve; it ascends with the anterior recurrent tibial artery through the tibialis anterior to the front of the knee.
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The lateral sural cutaneous nerve (nervus cutaneus surae lateralis; lateral cutaneous branch) supplies the skin on the posterior and lateral surfaces of the leg.
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The motor branches:
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As the common peroneal nerve exits the popliteal fossa, it courses around the lateral aspect of the leg just below the head of the fibula. Here it is apposed with fibula and gives off two branches, the superficial peroneal branch and deep peroneal branch.
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The superficial peroneal nerve supplies the muscles of the lateral compartment of the leg namely: peroneus longus and peroneus brevis. These two muscles assist with eversion and plantar flexion of the foot.
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The deep peroneal nerve innervates the muscles of the anterior compartment of the leg which are: tibialis anterior, extensor hallucis longus, extensor digitorum longus, and the peroneus tertius. Together these muscles are responsible for dorsiflexion of the foot and extension of the toes.
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The deep peroneal nerve also innervates intrinsic muscles of the foot including the extensor digitorum brevis and the extensor hallucis brevis.
Function
The common peroneal nerve innervates the short head of the biceps femoris muscle via a motor branch that exits close to the gluteal cleft.[2] The remainder of the peroneal-innervated muscles are innervated by its branches, the deep peroneal nerve and superficial peroneal nerve.
It provides sensory innervation to the skin over the upper third of the lateral aspect of the leg via the lateral cutaneous nerve of the calf.[3] It gives the peroneal communicating nerve which joins the sural nerve in the midcalf.
Clinical significance
Chronic peroneal neuropathy can result from, among other conditions, bed rest of long duration, hyperflexion of the knee, peripheral neuropathy, pressure in obstetric stirrups, and conditioning in ballet dancers. The most common cause is habitual leg crossing that compresses the common peroneal nerve as it crosses around the head of the fibula.[4] Transient trauma to the nerve can result from peroneal strike.
Damage to this nerve typically results in foot drop, where dorsiflexion of the foot is compromised and the foot drags (the toe points) during walking; and in sensory loss to the dorsal surface of the foot and portions of the anterior, lower-lateral leg. A common yoga kneeling exercise, the Varjrasana, has been linked to a variant called yoga foot drop .[5][6]
Surgery
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Peroneal nerve decompression:
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To surgically decompress the peroneal nerve, an incision is made over the neck of the fibula. Fascia surrounding the nerves to the lateral side of the leg is released.[7][8][9][10]
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Deep peroneal nerve decompression:
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In the surgical treatment of deep peroneal nerve entrapment in the foot, a ligament from the extensor digitorum brevis muscle that crosses over the deep peroneal nerve, putting pressure on it and causing pain, is released.[10]
Additional images
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Front and posterior views of cutaneous nerves of the right lower extremity
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A schematic of the sacral plexus showing the origin of the common fibular nerve (labeled at the bottom left)
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See also
References
This article incorporates text in the public domain from the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)
External links
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Anatomy photo:14:st-0501 at the SUNY Downstate Medical Center
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Peroneal_nerve at the Duke University Health System's Orthopedics program
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latleg at The Anatomy Lesson by Wesley Norman (Georgetown University)
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arteries-nerves%20LE/nerves4 at the Dartmouth Medical School's Department of Anatomy
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Overview at okstate.edu
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