Anatomy - Anatomy of Breathing Flashcards
What are the 3 layers of skeletal muscles for breathing and what do they do?
External intercostal muscles
Internal intercostal muscles
Innermost intercostal muscles
Pull adjacent ribs upwards and outwards. Slide 10
What is the intercostal nerve
Anterior ramus of spinal nerve. Slide 11
What is the blood supply for the posterior and anterior part of the intercostal spaces?
Posterior - Thoracic aorta and Azygous vein. Anterior - Internal thoracic artery and internal thoracic vein. Slide 11
What is the blood supply to the lung tissue?
Bronchial arteries from the thoracic aorta. Slide 12
What is the diaphragm?
A skeletal muscle with an unusual central tendon and forms floor of the chest cavity. Slide 13
What structures does the diaphragm attach to?
The sternum, the lower 6 ribs and costal cartliages and the L1-L3 vertebral bodies . Slide 13
What makes up the phrenic nerve, where is it found and what does it supply?
Combined spinal nerves 3, 4 and 5.
It is found in the neck of the anterior surface of the scalenus anterior muscle and the chest over the lateral part of the heart.
It supplies the diaphragm and the fibrous pericardium. Slide 14
What does the superolateral quadrant of the right female breast include?
Breast tissue and the axillary tail which is extended breast tissue. Slide 19
What blood vessels supply the breast and what is the drainage system of lymph?
The subclavian and internal thoracic vein and artery.
In the lateral quadrants the drainage is unilateral, in the medial quadrants the drainage is bilateral. Slide 20
How is a ‘winged scapula’ formed and what is it?
The long thoracic nerve supplies the serratus anterior. The serratus anterior anchors the scapula to the rib, so when the long thoracic nerve is damaged or cut off for a period of time it causes the paralysis of the serratus anterior so the scapula sticks out. Slide 23
What separates the subclavian vein and artery? and which is posterior and anterior?
The scalenus anterior separates it and the artery is posterior and the vein is anterior. Slide 26
When do the subclavian vessels become the axiallary vessels?
When the vessels are lateral to the lateral border of the first rib and the subclavian vessels are within the axilla. Slide 26
What is the hilum of the lung?
The root of the lung where there is the reflection of the pleura. Slide 28
The parietal pleura has 4 parts, what are they?
Cervical, costal, diaphragmatic and mediastinal parietal pleura. Slide 29
What does the costodiaphragmatic recess allow to be seen clinically?
If the patient is sitting upright then the costophrenic angle is blunted on an X-ray and not as sharp meaning there is abnormal fluid there. Slide 29