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The saphenous nerve, about the middle of the thigh, gives off a branch which joins the subsartorial plexus.
Saphenous nerve (pink), a branch of the femoral nerve.
This is due to the intimate path that the saphenous nerve and the great saphenous vein travel.
The infrapatellar branch of saphenous nerve is a nerve of the lower limb.
The sural nerve (short saphenous nerve) is a nerve in the leg.
The femoral artery with its vein and the saphenous nerve enter this canal through the superior foramen.
The branch to the Vastus medialis descends lateral to the femoral vessels in company with the saphenous nerve.
A patch of skin from the thigh and its corresponding section of the saphenous nerve were removed, mounted on a test stand immersed in interstitial fluid.
The saphenous nerve doesn't actually leave through the adductor hiatus but penetrates superficially halfway through the adductor canal.
The medial crural cutaneous branches of saphenous nerve provide cutaneous innervation to the medial leg.
The other two structures that are associated with the adductor hiatus are the saphenous branch of descending genicular artery and the saphenous nerve.
In the thigh it divides into numerous sensory and muscular branches and the saphenous nerve, its long sensory terminal branch which continues down to the foot.
Then, the saphenous nerve and artery and vein of genus descendens exit through the anterior foramen, piercing the vastoadductor intermuscular septum.
The saphenous nerve (long or internal saphenous nerve) is the largest cutaneous branch of the femoral nerve.
Procedures such as saphenous vein cutdown can result in damage to the saphenous nerve, resulting in loss of cutaneous sensation in the medial leg.
Damage to the saphenous nerve and its infrapatellar branch is possible during medial knee surgery, potentially causing numbness or pain over the medial knee and leg.
It also supplies the integument of the medial side of the foot and ankle, and communicates with the saphenous nerve, and with the deep peroneal nerve.
The saphenous nerve from the femoral nerve provides sensory innervation to the medial side of the foot as well as the medial side of the leg.
The one stage CFNG, implies an end-to-side coaptation of the sural or saphenous nerve to the distal end of the affected facial nerve.
In the one stage procedure a free muscle transplant with a latissimus dorsi graft or a nerve graft (using the sural nerve or saphenous nerve) can be used.
The canal contains the femoral artery, femoral vein, and branches of the femoral nerve (specifically, the saphenous nerve, and the nerve to the vastus medialis).
The saphenous branch of descending genicular artery pierces the aponeurotic covering of the adductor canal, and accompanies the saphenous nerve to the medial side of the knee.
The posterior branch descends along the medial border of the sartorius to the knee, where it pierces the fascia lata, communicates with the saphenous nerve, and gives off several cutaneous branches.
The saphenous nerve is a branch of the femoral nerve that runs with the great saphenous vein and is often damaged in surgeries that make use of the similarly named vein.
The sural or saphenous nerve as cross facial nerve graft is coapted to this unaffected branch of the facial nerve and tunnelled across the face to the paralysed side through a subcutaneous tunnel.