Anatomy Of The Respiratory System Flashcards

1
Q

In the upper respiratory tract (URT), what happens at the level of C5 vertebra?

A
  • the larynx becomes the trachea
  • the pharynx becomes the oesophagus
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2
Q

What is the pharynx consisted of

A

The nasal pharynx (most superior part)
The oro pharynx
Larygyl pharynx (most inferior) -

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3
Q

What is the surface landmark for the bifurcation of the trachea?

A

The sternal angle

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4
Q

How many lobes are in each lung and what are they called?

A

Right: 3 lobes
Upper, middle and lower lobe

Left: 2 lobes
Upper and middle lobe

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5
Q

What is a fissure?

A

Deep crevices that separate the lobes from each other

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6
Q

How many bronchopulmonary segments does each lung have?

A

10

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7
Q

What is a bronchopulmonary segment?

A

The area of lung lobe that each on of the segmental bronchi supply with air

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8
Q

What’s special about the lungs that means a surgeon can remove a segment of lung rather than the whole lung or lobe if for example there is an isolated tumour?

A

Each lobe and each bronchopulmonary segment has its own air, blood and nerve supply and lymphatic drainage. This means patients can have just the bronchopulmonary segment removed

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9
Q

What are the components of the bronchial tree in order

A

The trachea the main bronchi (left and right), a lobar bronchus, a segmental bronchus, bronchioles (airways <1mm) and aveoli (thin walled air sacs)

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10
Q

What structures are lined by respiratory cells?

A

Everything from trachea to the proximal part of the bronchioles

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11
Q

What’s special about respiratory epithelium? Also known as “mucocillary escilator”

A

Epithelium has mucous glands that secretes mucous onto epithelial surface
The epithelial surface also has cilla to sweep mucous any foreign bodies in mucous superiorly towards pharynx to be swallowed down into stomach

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12
Q

What can stop the cilia from the respiratory epithelium from beating properly

A

Cooling/drying of the mucosa
Toxins in cigarette smoke

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13
Q

How does the trachea and all the bronchi remain open (patency)?

A

Hyaline cartilage
The amount of cartilage gradually reduces as you go down the respiratory tree

(the bronchioles and the aveoli dont have ant hyaline cartilage tho)

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14
Q

Why do the aveoli not have any cartilage or smooth muscle in their walls?

A

As it would impact on diffusion - aveolar walls are extremely thin

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15
Q

Where is most of the smooth muscle in the respiratory tree?

A

Smooth muscles in the walls progressively become more prominent the further away you get from the trachea (more distally)
Smooth muscle is the most prominent feature of the walls of the bronchioles - they can therefore constrict and dilate

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16
Q

What causes a wheeze?

A

The sound ade as air passes through constricted (narrowed) airways

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17
Q

Where do you find a neuromuscular bundle and what does it consist of?

A

In the costal groove of each rib - also is between internal an innermost intercostal muscle layers

It consists of a vein, artery and nerve

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18
Q

What is an intercostal nerve?

A

It is the anterior ramus of the thoracic spinal nerve (supplying the antero-lateral of the body wall)

19
Q

What arteries and veins supply/drain the posterior aspect of the intercostal space

A

Arterial supply - thoracic aorta ~anastomoses with the thoracic artery about midway of the intercostal space
Venous drainage - azygous vein

20
Q

What arteries and veins supply/drain the anterior aspect of the intercostal space

A

Arterial supply - internal thoracic artery (runs on so the side of the sternum) ~ anastomoses with the thoracic artery about midway of the intercostal space
Venous drainage - internal thoracic vein

21
Q

What does the diaphragm do?

A

Separates the thorax from the abdomen (floor of chest cavity and roof of abdominal cavity)
Considered to be the primary muscle or respiration

22
Q

What is the diaphragm?

A

A skeletal muscle with an unusual central tendon
Arranged as right and left “domes” - right dome more superior due to liver which is inferior

23
Q

What does the muscular part of the diaphragm attach to? What is it supplied by?

A
  1. Sternum
  2. Lower 6 ribs and costal cartilages
  3. L1-L3 vertebral bodies

Supplied by the phrenic nerve (C3,4 & 5 anterior rami)

24
Q

What makes up the phrenic nerve?

A

The combined anterior rami of cervical spinal nerves C3,4 &5

25
Q

Where would you find the phrenic nerve?

A

Found in the neck on the anterior surface of the scalenus anterior muscle
Found in the chest (thorax) descending over the lateral aspects of the heart (on the fibrous pericardium)

26
Q

What type of axons does it supply to the diaphragm and fibrous pericardium?

A

Supplies:
Somatic sensory and sympathetic axons to diaphragm and fibrous pericardium
Somatic motor axons to the diaphragm

Also relays sensory nerves from diaphragm

(C3,4,5 keeps the diaphragm alive)

27
Q

What is the mechanics of inspiration?

A
  1. Diaphragm contracts and descends - increases vertical chest dimension
  2. Intercostal uncles contract elevating ribs - increases antero-Posterior and Lateral chest dimensions
  3. Chest wall pulls lungs outwards (as the visceral and parietal pleura are stuck together) - causes a negative pressure un the lungs so air flows in
28
Q

What are the mechanics for expiration?

A
  1. Diaphragm relaxes and rises - decreases vertical thoracic dimension
  2. Intercostal muscles relax lowering the ribs - decreases antero-posterior and lateral chest dimensions
  3. Elastic tissue of lungs recoils - air flows out of lungs
29
Q

What are the 4 quadrants of the female breast?

A

Superolateral quadrant (upper and outer)
Superomedial quadrant (upper and inner)
Inferolateral quadrant (lower outer)
Inferomedial quadrant (lower inner)

30
Q

What are the parts of the breast you examine during a breast examination?

A

All 4 quadrants, nipple, areola, axillary tail (assoc. with upper outer) and the regional lymphatics

31
Q

What is the arterial supply and venous drainage of the female breast?

A

Dominant Supply: branches of subclavian artery - main supply is internal thoracic artery which is a branch of the subclavian artery

Drainage: tributaries to the subclavian vein - main vein draining breast internal thoracic vein which drains into subclavian vein

32
Q

How does the lateral quadrants drain into the axillary nodes?

A

Lateral quadrants of breast drain unilaterally to axillary lymph nodes
Left lateral quadrants drain to the left axillary lymph nodes
The medial quadrants (upper/lower inner) of the breast drains bilaterally to the parasternal nodes (chains run parallel and deep to the sterna’s edges - each breast drains into both right and left parasternal nodes)

33
Q

What are the layer of the anterolateral chest wall from superficial to deep?

A

Skin
Superficial fascia -adipose tissue (insulation)
Deep fascia - fibrous, tough but thin (protection)
Sensory nerves - intercostal nerves
Skeletal muscles e.g. deltoid, pectoralis major, serratus anterior (anchors scapula to ribs)

34
Q

Where is the serratus anterior muscle groups?
What nerve supplies the serratus anterior?
What happens if damage happens to this nerve?

A

Sandwiched between the pectoralis major and latissimus dorsi
Supplied by the long thoracic nerve - if injured causes paralysis = winged scapula
Nerve found on the serratus anterior superficial surface - making it more vulnerable to injury

35
Q

When do subclavian vessels become axillary vessels?

A

When it passes rib 1 (now into armpit/axilla)

36
Q

What does internal thoracic veins & arteries supply in the chest wall

A

The anterior part of the Intercostal neurovascular bundles
Supply of the breasts

37
Q

What are the different types of parietal pleura?

A

Mediastinal parietal pleura - contact with mediastinum
Diaphragmatic parietal pleura - contacts with diaphragm
Costal parietal pleura - contact with ribs
Cervical parietal pleura - just at the apex, extending into neck (above rib 1)

38
Q

What is the costodiaphragmatic recess

A

The inferior most extend of the pleural cavity

The most dependent part of the pleural cavity when someone is standing upright - it is the deepest part of the pleural cavity so any abnormal fluid tend to drain into recess (will be at the costophrenic angle as it is the MOST inferior region)

39
Q

Wat structures are found at the hilum/root of the lung?

A

1 main/primary bronchus - most posterior and middle structure
1 main pulmonary artery - most superior structure
2 pulmonary veins - most anterior and inferior structure
Lymphyatics - lymph nodes usually dispersed between other structures
Visceral afferents - sensory nerves to lungs
Sympathetic nerves
Parasympathetic nerves

All of these structures must be cut through if you want to remove the lungs

40
Q

What are the fissures on the lungs? And what is the lingula?

A

Right lung has an oblique and horizontal fissure
Left lung has an oblique fissure and lingula (feature that is unique to the uperizar lobe of the left lung)

41
Q

What is the corresponding surface anatomy to the horizontal fissure on the right lung?

A

Follows right rib 4 - separates Superior and middle lobe
Help for auscultating: above ~ superior lobe, below ~ middle lobe

42
Q

What is the corresponding surface anatomy of the oblique fissures?

A

Located anteriorly at rib 6 and rises posteriorly to T3 vertebral level
Between rib 4 and 6 of the right lung is the middle lobe
This just separated the upper and lower lobe of the left lung

43
Q

Where do you put your stethoscope if you want to hear the apex of the lung?

A

In the root of the neck - superior to the medial 1/3rd of the clavicle

44
Q

Where do you put your stethoscope to listen ti the base of the lung?

A

Scapular line at T11 vertebral level
(Scapular line - passes vertically through the inferior angle of the scapula)