Attachments The muscle descends diagonally from its origin to its insertion.
Relations One of the muscles within the floor of the
posterior triangle of the neck, the superior part of levator scapulae is covered by sternocleidomastoid and its inferior part by the
trapezius. It is bounded in front by the
scalenus medius and behind by
splenius cervicis. The
spinal accessory nerve crosses laterally in the middle part of the muscle and the
dorsal scapular nerve may lie deep to or pass through it. The levator scapulae may lie deep to the
sternocleidomastoid at its origin, deep or adjacent to the
splenius capitis at its origin and mid-portion, and deep to the
trapezius in its lower portion.
Variation The number of attachments varies; a slip may extend to the occipital or
mastoid, to the
trapezius,
scalene or
serratus anterior, or to the first or second rib. The muscle may be subdivided into several distinct parts from origin to insertion. Levator claviculæ from the transverse processes of one or two upper cervical vertebræ to the outer end of the
clavicle corresponds to a muscle of lower animals. More or less union with the serratus anterior muscle.
Innervation The levator scapulae is innervated by 2–3 branches of the 3rd and 4th
cervical nerves, and frequently by a branch from the
dorsal scapular nerve.
Blood supply The levator scapulae is supplied by the
dorsal scapular artery. Normally, this artery has a small branch which passes laterally to the
supraspinatus fossa of the scapula, and in a third of cases, this branch supplies the muscle. If the dorsal scapular artery comes off the
transverse cervical artery, the parent transverse cervical artery splits the dorsal scapular artery passes medially, while the transverse cervical artery passes laterally. ==Function==