The brachial plexus is an arrangement of nerve fibres, running from the spine, formed by the ventral rami of the lower cervical and upper thoracic nerve roots, specifically from above the fifth cervical vertebra to underneath the first thoracic vertebra (C5-T1). It proceeds through the neck, the axilla (armpit region) and into the arm.
The brachial plexus is responsible for cutaneous and muscular innervation of the entire upper limb, with two exceptions: the trapezius muscle innervated by the spinal accessory nerve and an area of skin near the axilla innervated by the intercostobrachialis nerve.
One can remember the order of brachial plexus elements by way of the mnemonic, "Read The Damn Cadaver Book" (Or, alternatively, Randy TravisDrinks Cold Beer") - Roots, Trunks, Divisions, Cords, Branches[1] or - Roots, Trunks, Divisions, Cords, Collateral/Pre-terminal Branches, and (Terminal) Branches.
The five roots are the five anterior rami of the spinal nerves, after they have given off their segmental supply to the muscles of the neck.
Each trunk then splits in two, to form six divisions:
anterior division[5] of the upper, middle and lower trunks
posterior division[6] of the upper, middle, and lower trunks
These six divisions will regroup to become the three cords. The cords are named by their position in respect to the axillary artery.
The posterior cord is formed from the three posterior divisions of the trunks (C5-T1)
The lateral cord is the anterior divisions from the upper and middle trunks (C5-C7)
The medial cord is simply a continuation of the anterior division of the lower trunk (C8-T1)
The branches are listed below. Most branch from the cords, but a few branch (indicated in italics) directly from earlier structures. The five in bold are considered "terminal branches".