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10 – Sonoanatomy: PECS I block and step one of the PECS II block

The local anaesthetic is injected into the fascial space between the muscle fascia of the major pectoral muscle anteriorly and the clavipectoral fascia with the minor pectoral muscle posteriorly

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Major pectoral muscle (red asterix), minor pectoral muscle (green asterix), red needle, axillary artery (A), axillary vein (V).
The black expansion between the major and minor pectoral muscles around the tip of the needle is the local anaesthetic

11 – Sonoanatomy: Step two of the PECS II block

At the infero-lateral margin of the minor pectoral muscle the strong Gerdy’s ligament (= the lower part of the clavicopectoral fascia) connects the minor pectoral muscle to the axillary fascia

When the needle tip penetrates Gerdy’s ligament it enters the the lower part of the axillary space between the Gerdy’s ligament antero-laterally and the serratus anterior muscle covering the lateral thoracic wall medially in the axilla

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Gerdy’s ligament (cyan arrows), minor pectoral muscle (green asterix), major pectoral muscle (red asterix), serratus anterior (magenta asterix), pleura (red arrows), ribs III and IV (r3 and r4)

9 – Scanning technique

Place the patient supine

Place the probe in the sagittal plane below the lateral third of the clavicle and identify the axillary artery and vein below the pectoral muscles

Rotate the probe to obtain an oblique orientation with the proximal end of the probe medial and the distal end of the probe lateral

Visualize the sonoanatomical target (see next pages)

Insert the needle with in-plane technique from the proximal end of the probe and advance the needle tip to the target (see next pages) before injecting the local anaesthetic

Inject 10 mL for the PECS I block and step one of the PECS II block. Inject a supplementary 20 mL for step two of the PECS II block

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Start by placing the probe sagittal (se picture) and then rotate the probe to an oblique orientation

12 – Sonoanatomy: Identify the ribs

Below the lateral third of the clavicle the axillary artery is typically located on top of the second rib

Ribs III and IV can be identified by sliding caudad and counting

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Axillary artery (A), rib 2 (r2), rib 3 (r3), major pectoral muscle (red asterix), minor pectoral muscle (green asterix), serratus anterior muscle (magenta asterix)

6 – Anatomy: The nerves in the axilla

The anterior wall of the axilla consists of the major and minor pectoral muscles and the clavipectoral fascia

The medial wall of the axilla is the lateral thoracic wall with costae I-IV and intercostal muscles – and the serratus anterior muscle

The lateral wall is the intertubercular groove of the humerus and the posterior wall is the subscapularis, teres major and latissimus dorsi muscles.

The axilla contains some nerves that are relevant for axillary extension of breast surgery:

1) the lateral cutaneous branches of the intercostal nerves
2) the anterior intercostal branches of the intercostal nerves
3) the long thoracic nerve that innervates the serratus anterior muscle
4) the thoracodorsal nerve that innervates the latissimus dorsi muscle

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Lateral cutaneous branch of intercostal nerves I (black arrow), II (white arrow), IV (green arrow), major and minor pectoral muscles (green and cyan asterixs), latissimus dorsi (magenta asterix), serratus anterior (blue asterix), long thoracic nerve (magenta arrows), thoracodorsal nerve (cyan arrows)

8 – Anatomy: Cutaneous innervation of the branches of the intercostal nerves

The lateral cutaneous branches (syn: lateral mammary branches) of the intercostal nerves innervate the skin of the axilla (the intercostobrachial nerve, which is the lateral cutaneous branch from intercostal nerve T2 innervates part of the skin of the axilla and continues to innervate the skin of the proximal medial surface of the arm) and the lateral part of the breast

The anterior cutaneous branches (syn: medial cutaneous branches or medial mammary branches) of the intercostal nerves innervate the supero-medial part of the breast

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Lateral cutaneous branches of the intercostal nerves (blue arrows and purple area).
Anterior cutaneous branches of the intercostal nerves (magenta arrows and red area)

Supraclavicular nerves (green arrows)

7 – Anatomy: Intercostal nerves

The intercostal nerves run in the intercostal spaces sandwiched between the socalled innermost intercostal muscle and the internal and external intercostal muscles superficially joined by the intercostal arteries and veins

The lateral cutaneous branches of the intercostal nerves branch off in the midaxillary line, pierce the internal and external intercostal muscles and branch into a posterior and an anterior terminal branch; the latter runs anterior to innervate the skin covering the infero-lateral part of the breast

The anterior cutaneous branches of the intercostal nerves run anterior to the internal mammary artery, pierce the intercostal membranes and innervate the medial part of the breast

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Intercostal nerves (green arrows), lateral cutaneous branches (magenta arrows), anterior cutaneous branches (cyan arrows)

5 – Anatomy: The clavipectoral fascia penetrated by nerve and vessels

The part of the clavipectoral fascia close to the clavicle – the costocoracoid ligament – is penetrated by the cephalic vein, the lateral pectoral nerve and the thoracoacromial artery

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The clavipectoral fascia is pierced by the lateral pectoral nerve together with the cephalic vein (magenta arrow) and by the thoracoacromial artery (cyan arrow). The cephalic vein runs upward in the deltopectoral groove between the deltoid muscle (cyan asterix) and the major pectoral muscle (green asterisks)

1 – Indications

Postoperative analgesia after breast surgery as an alternative to thoracic epidural or thoracic paravertebral blocks

Pecs I: analgesia after insertion of breast expanders and sub pectoral prosthesis, pacemakers, porth-a-caths and chest drains

Pecs II: analgesia of (1) the axilla – required for axillary clearance and (2) intercostal nerves – required for wide excisions including several types of mastectomies and sentinel node biopsy

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Picture of the lateral (blue arrow) and medial (cyan arrow) pectoral nerves as well as the thoracoacromial artery (magenta arrow). The minor pectoral muscle is depicted with orange

The major pectoral muscle is not shown

2 – Anatomy: The medial and lateral pectoral nerves

The lateral pectoral nerve typically origins from the spinal nerve roots C5-C7 and branches off the lateral cord of the brachial plexus

It runs across the superior-medial margin of the minor pectoral muscle piercing the clavipectoral fascia (see next page) and enters the fascial space between the minor and major pectoral muscles; it innervates the two pectoral muscles

The medial pectoral nerve origins from C8-T1 and branches off the medial cord of the brachial plexus

It typically pierces the minor pectoral muscle and enters the fascial space between the minor and major pectoral muscles; it innervates the two pectoral muscles

The two pectoral nerves run adjacent to the pectoral branch of the thoracoacromial artery in the fascial space between the minor and major pectoral muscles

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Lateral and medial pectoral nerves (blue and cyan arrows), pectoral branch (white arrow) of the thoracoacromial artery, tendons of the minor and major pectoral muscles (cyan and magenta asterixs). The major pectoral muscle is transparent and marked with magenta arrows. The serratus anterior is orange.