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go to the muscles on the anterior of the thigh, as to the
rectus fcmoris, the vastus extcrnus to the crurceus, and a
long branch to the vastus interims; and from this nerve
large filaments go to the periosteum about the knee, and
to the knee joint. We see that the sartorius receives its
supply from cutaneous twigs. The branch to the femoral
sheath enters it at once near the groin, and there surrounds
the femoral artery and vein, and the profoundcr vessels; some
of these re-unite and escape from the saphenous opening to
pass downwards with that vein; others are distributed to the
adductor muscles, and connect with the long saphenous nerve.
The short saphenous nerve descends on the inner border of the
sartorius to the lower third of the thigh, and is lost about the
knee joint; but one branch accompanies the femoral vessels to
the point opposite the termination of the femoral artery, when'
it divides and anastomoses with other nerves, as the obturator,
<fcc, so as to form there a plexus, and from this, branches ramify
the integument upon the internal and posterior aspect of the
lower thigh. The long; saphenous nerve, (cutaneus interniHB
longus,) after leaving the femoral nerve trunk, accompanies the
femoral artery to the aponeurotic canal formed by the adductor
longtis and the vastus interims muscles. It here quits the ar-
tery, passes between the tendons of the sartorius and gracilis
muscles, descends along the inner side of the leg down to the
front of the inner ankle, and is distributed to the integument
over the inner side of the foot, as far as the great toe. But
there is first a tibial cutaneous branch from this, that branches
off a little above the internal condyle at the knee, and passes
down, giving a constant supply of surface twigs over the
inner aspect of the leg, even to the ankle; also another short
branch that supplies the synovial membrane of the knee joint;
also another that supplies first the integument over and about
the patella and around the knee ; then the skin and fascia
on the front and outer aspect of the leg as far down as the
ankle ; and lastly, some cutaneous branches that come off from
the long saphenous a little below the knee to supply the integ-
ument on the inner side and front of the leg and foot, and to
give articular branches to the ankle joint.