Greater sciatic notch

The greater sciatic notch is a notch in the ilium, one of the bones that make up the human pelvis. It lies between the posterior inferior iliac spine (above), and the ischial spine (below). The sacrospinous ligament changes this notch into an opening, the greater sciatic foramen.

Greater sciatic notch
Surface of the hip showing the greater sciatic notch in red.
Details
Identifiers
LatinIncisura ischiadica major
TA98A02.5.01.009
TA21315
FMA16902
Anatomical terms of bone

The notch holds the piriformis, the superior gluteal vein and artery, and the superior gluteal nerve; the inferior gluteal vein and artery and the inferior gluteal nerve; the sciatic and posterior femoral cutaneous nerves; the internal pudendal artery and veins, and the nerves to the internal obturator and quadratus femoris muscles.

Of these, the superior gluteal vessels and nerve pass out above the piriformis, and the other structures below it.

The greater sciatic notch is wider in women (about 74.4 degrees on average) than in men (about 50.4 degrees).[1]

See also

References

This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 235 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

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