Posterior Root of Seventh Thoracic Nerve (Right)
Radix posterior nervi thoracici septimi
Read moreQuick Facts
Origin: Seventh thoracic nerve.
Course: Medially towards the posterior side of the spinal cord.
Branches: None.
Supply: Sensory innervation from the mid trunk.
Related parts of the anatomy
Origin
The posterior root of the seventh thoracic nerve originates just lateral to or in the intervertebral foramen, between the seventh and eighth thoracic vertebrae. This corresponds to the point where the thoracic nerve splits into anterior and posterior roots.
Course
The posterior root of the seventh thoracic nerve runs from the intervertebral foramen medially towards the posterior side of the spinal cord. Because the intervertebral foramen is significantly lower than the corresponding spinal cord level, the posterior root must also ascend within the vertebral column. Adjacent to the appropriate spinal cord level, the posterior root splits into smaller rootlets, which enter the posterior spinal cord in line with the dorsal horn of the gray matter.
Branches
There are no branches of the posterior root of the seventh thoracic nerve. The proximal end of the posterior root has a bulge called the spinal (or dorsal root) ganglion, which is the location of the neuronal cell bodies of the neurons that form the posterior root.
Supplied Structures & Function
The posterior root of the seventh thoracic nerve carries all afferents from the seventh thoracic nerve, both somatic and visceral, to the seventh thoracic spinal segment of the spinal cord.
General somatic afferents originate in the sensory receptors of the periphery and convey sensations such as pain, temperature, and touch from the skin. Stretch receptors in muscles also send information on stretch via general somatic afferents.
The somatic afferents pass from either the posterior ramus or the anterior ramus of the seventh thoracic nerve into the seventh thoracic nerve itself. As they reach the medial border of the thoracic nerve, they segregate from the outgoing efferents by branching off to form the posterior root of the seventh thoracic nerve.
The posterior ramus of the seventh thoracic nerve conveys general somatic sense from the dorsal skin and epaxial muscles of the mid trunk to the posterior root of the seventh thoracic nerve.
The anterior ramus of the seventh thoracic spinal nerve conveys general somatic sensations from the skin of the thoracic wall and muscles of the seventh intercostal space to the posterior root of the seventh thoracic nerve and to the spinal cord. Additionally, sensory information from the skin and muscles of the abdomen is conveyed back to the posterior root of the seventh thoracic level.
General visceral afferents from the foregut and midgut travel back along the greater splanchnic nerve and into the seventh thoracic nerve, via the gray communicating branches (rami communicantes) of the sympathetic chain, before segregating into the posterior root of the seventh thoracic nerve. These continue into the posterior horn of the seventh thoracic spinal segment of the spinal cord.
List of Clinical Correlates
—Referred pain