To get the best experience while viewing this site, it is recommended that you upgrade to a modern browser version of Chrome or Firefox.

You may do so by clicking on one of these icons:


southern new mexico surgery center
 
  •  

  •  
    Health Library Explorer
    A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z A-Z Listings Contact Us
    Lab Tests
    A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Back to Intro
    Click a letter to see a list of medical procedures beginning with that letter.
    Click 'Back to Intro' to return to the beginning of this section.

    Dermatomes

    What is a dermatome?

    Your nervous system is made up of your nerves, spinal cord, and brain.

    Nerve information such as pain, heat, or cold travels from your hands, arms, legs, feet, trunk, or head to your spinal cord and then to your brain. When healthcare providers are trying to diagnose a nerve problem, they find it useful to think of what nerve or part of the spinal cord may be involved in the problem. If your leg doesn't work as it should, for instance, your provider may look at the nerve or nerves that send nerve information from your leg. Or the provider might decide your leg problem is linked to a certain part of your spinal cord. When that's the case, the area affected may involve a dermatome. This is a spinal nerve linked to that area of your leg.

    What is a dermatome map?

    The illustration below is called a dermatome map. It shows a series of lines that run from the spine around the trunk or out along the arms or legs.  The areas between the lines are dermatomes. These are areas where nerves in various parts of the body connect to the spinal cord. The actual location of the lines varies from person to person. Skin on your face has dermatomes that correspond to nerves connecting directly to the brain.

    If your provider thinks you might have a problem in your spine, they may look for dermatome patterns of loss of function, especially loss of sensation. If your provider thinks you might have a problem in one or more nerves after they leave the spine, then they may look for a pattern of problems that correspond to where that nerve goes and what it does: Is it involved in sensation? Or does it govern how your muscles work? 

    Front view of male figure showing dermatomes.Back view of male figure showing dermatomes.

    Online Medical Reviewer: Anne Fetterman RN BSN
    Online Medical Reviewer: Joseph Campellone MD
    Online Medical Reviewer: Raymond Kent Turley BSN MSN RN
    Date Last Reviewed: 9/1/2022
    © 2000-2024 The StayWell Company, LLC. All rights reserved. This information is not intended as a substitute for professional medical care. Always follow your healthcare professional's instructions.
    horizontal line

    Southern New Mexico
    Surgery Center

    2301 Indian Wells Rd. Suite B
    Alamogordo, NM 88310
    www.snmsc.org

    Phone: 575.437.0890
    Fax: 575.437.0905
    Email: info@snmsc.org

    Disclaimer