Cervical ribs are the ribs of the neck in many tetrapods. In most mammals, including humans, cervical ribs are not normally present as separate structures. They can, however, occur as a pathology. In humans, pathological cervical ribs are usually not of clinical concern, although they can cause a form of thoracic outlet syndrome.
A cervical rib in humans is an extrarib which arises from the seventh cervical vertebra. Their presence is a congenital abnormality located above the normal first rib. A cervical rib is estimated to occur in 0.2%[6] to 0.5%[7] (1 in 200 to 500) of the population.[8] People may have a cervical rib on the right, left or both sides.[9][10]
Most cases of cervical ribs are not clinically relevant and do not have symptoms;[11][12] cervical ribs are generally discovered incidentally, most often during x-rays and CT scans.[7][8][10] However, they vary widely in size and shape,[7] and in rare cases, they may cause problems such as contributing to thoracic outlet syndrome,[11] because of pressure on the nerves that may be caused by the presence of the rib.[11][13]
A cervical rib represents a persistent ossification of the C7 lateral costal element.[11][12] During early development, this ossified costal element typically becomes re-absorbed. Failure of this process results in a variably elongated transverse process or complete rib that can be anteriorly fused with the T1 first rib below.[14]
Diagnosis
On imaging, cervical ribs can be distinguished because their transverse processes are directed inferolaterally, whereas those of the adjacent thoracic spine are directed anterolaterally.[15]
Compression of the brachial plexus may be identified by weakness of the muscles in the hand, near the base of the thumb. Compression of the subclavian artery is often diagnosed by finding a positive Adson's sign on examination, where the radial pulse in the arm is lost during abduction and external rotation of the shoulder.[11] A positive Adson's sign is non-specific for the presence of a cervical rib however, as many individuals without a cervical rib will have a positive test. Compression of the sympathetic chain may cause Horner's syndrome.
In other animals
Recent studies have also found a high percent of cervical ribs in woolly mammoths. It is believed that the decline in mammoth numbers may have forced inbreeding within the species which in turn had increased the number of mammoths being born with cervical ribs. Cervical ribs have been connected with leukaemia in human children, so it has given scientists new evidence to believe that the mammoth's extinction was attributed to the condition.[16] They have also been interpreted as a sign of inbreeding depression in other mammals, such as Megaloceros.[17]
References
^Romer, Alfred Sherwood (1956). Osteology of the Reptiles.
^Moore, Andrew J.; Barrett, Paul M.; Upchurch, Paul; Liao, Chun-Chi; Ye, Yong; Hao, Baoqiao; Xu, Xing (2023-03-15). "Re-assessment of the Late Jurassic eusauropod Mamenchisaurus sinocanadorum Russell and Zheng, 1993, and the evolution of exceptionally long necks in mamenchisaurids". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 21 (1). Bibcode:2023JSPal..2171818M. doi:10.1080/14772019.2023.2171818. ISSN1477-2019.
^Guttentag, Adam; Salwen, Julia (1999). "Keep Your Eyes on the Ribs: The Spectrum of Normal Variants and Diseases That Involve the Ribs". RadioGraphics. 19 (5): 1125–1142. doi:10.1148/radiographics.19.5.g99se011125. PMID10489169.
^Balan, Nisha Sharma, Anu (2008). Get through FRCR part 2B : rapid reporting of plain radiographs. London: Royal Society of Medicine. ISBN978-1853157547.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Cuxart-Erruz, Raimon; Van Dooren, Tom J. M.; van der Geer, Alexandra A. E.; Galis, Frietson (2024-09-24). "Increased incidences of cervical ribs in deer indicate extinction risk". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 121 (39): –2406670121. doi:10.1073/pnas.2406670121. PMC 11441530. PMID39284067.