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Inferior cervical cardiac nerve
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The inferior cervical cardiac nerve arises from the stellate ganglion (cervicothoracic gangion), or from the ansa subclavia of the cervical sympathetic trunk. It passes along the posterior aspect of the brachiocephalic trunk on the right side of the body, and of the internal carotid artery on the left side. It terminates by joining the deep cardiac plexus.[2]
Quick Facts Details, To ...
Inferior cervical cardiac nerve | |
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![]() Diagram of the cervical sympathetic. (Lower cervical ganglion labeled at bottom right.) | |
![]() Plan of right sympathetic cord and splanchnic nerves. (Inferior cervical ganglion labeled at upper right.) | |
Details | |
To | Cardiac plexus |
Innervates | Heart |
Identifiers | |
Latin | nervus cardiacus cervicalis inferior[1] |
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy |
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Posterior to the subclavian artery, it communicates freely with the recurrent nerve and the middle cardiac nerve.[citation needed]