Lymphatics from the fingers accompany the cephalic and basilic veins and enter the lateral axillary and deltopectoral (or infraclavicular) nodes .
Axillary Nodes. These important nodes are arbitrarily divided into five groups:
1. The lateral nodes lie behind the axillary vein and drain the upper limb.
2. The pectoral nodes, at the inferior border of the pectoralis minor, drain most of the breast.
3. The posterior, or subscapular, nodes, in the posterior axillary fold, drain the posterior shoulder.
4. The central nodes, near the base of the axilla, receive the lymph from the preceding three groups. They form the group most likely to be palpable (against the lateral thoracic wall).
5. The apical nodes lie medial to the axillary vein and superior to the pectoralis minor. The apical nodes receive the lymph from all the other groups and sometimes directly from the breast. They drain into two or three subclavian trunks, which enter the jugular-subclavian venous confluence, or join a common lymphatic duct, or empty into lower, deep cervical nodes.