Subcostalis muscle
| Subcostalis muscle | |
|---|---|
| Latin | musculus subcostalis |
| Gray's | subject #117 403 |
| Origin | inner surface of one rib |
| Insertion | inner surface of the second or third rib below, near its angle |
| Artery | |
| Nerve | intercostal nerves |
| Actions | depresses ribs. |
The Subcostales (singular: subcostalis) (Infracostales) consist of muscular and aponeurotic fasciculi, which are usually well-developed only in the lower part of the thorax; each originates from the inner surface of one rib , and is inserted into the inner surface of the second or third rib below, near its angle.
Their fibers run in the same direction as those of the Intercostales interni.
The function of this muscle is unknown, but it is part of the innermost intercostal muscle group along with the transversus thoracis muscle which is known to be a synergist in aiding the internal intercostal muscles with forced exhalation.
[edit] External links
- LUC sbc
- 537264206 at GPnotebook
- subcostal+muscle at eMedicine Dictionary
This article was originally based on an entry from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy. As such, some of the information contained within it may be outdated.
| This muscle article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |