Anterior Abdominal Wall Flashcards
What is the peritoneum?
An extensive serous membrane that covers abdominal organs and the wall of the abdominal cavity.
Describe the apertures (holes) in the abdominal walls.
Front: umbilical vessels, including the allantois and vitelline duct.
Above: the vena caval opening for the IVC, the aortic hiatus for the aorta, azygous vein, and thoracic duct, and the esophageal hiatus for the esophagus.
Below: two on both sides, one for the femoral vessels and nerve, and the other for the spermatic cord (male) or round ligament of the uterus (female)
How are the abdominal quadrants divided?
Vertical line through the midline, horizontal line at the umbilicus
How many anatomical regions of the abdomen are there? What are the two usual transverse planes that divide the abdomen?
9, the subcostal plane (at the level of the inferior part of rib 12) and the intertubercular planes divide the abdomen.
What will you encounter first when you cut open someone’s abdomen?
Two fascial layers. An outer fatty layer (Camper’s fascia - several cm thick), and an inner membranous layer (Scarpa’s fascia - thin)
After you get through the abdominal fascia, what muscles will you encounter (from superficial to deep)? What is deep to these muscles?
Rectus abdominis, external oblique, internal oblique, and transversus abdominus. Deep to these is the transversalis fascia, followed by some extra-peritoneal CT, and finally the innermost lining of the abdominal cavity is the peritoneum.
What happens to Camper’s fascia and Scarpa’s fascia as they travel inferiorly?
Camper’s fascia continues from the abdomen onto the fatty layer of the thigh; Scarpa’s fascia is attached to the iliac crest and the fascia lata approximately 2-3 cm inferior to the inguinal ligament.
What happens to Scarpa’s fascia as it passes into the scrotum?
It becomes Colle’s fascia
What happens to Camper’s fascia as it passes into the scrotum?
It loses fat, gains smooth muscle and is called the Tunica Dartos aka Dartos fascia. This is responsible for wrinkled balls in the cold.
What does Scarpa’s fascia do in the pubic region?
It contributes fibers to the suspensory ligament of the penis, the fundiform ligament.
The linea alba is a midline tendinous band which runs from the ________ ________ to the _______. The aponeuroses of the three flat abdominal muscles contribute to its formation.
xyphoid process to the pubis
Where does the external oblique muscle originate from? Where does it insert?
Originates from the external surface and inferior border of ribs 5-12 (upper fibers join with the serratus anterior and lower fibers join with the latissimus dorsi).
Lowest fibers insert onto the anterior half of the iliac crest and the remaining ones terminate onto a broad aponeurosis which inserts into the midline linea alba, the inguinal ligament, and onto the pubic tubercle.
What forms the superficial inguinal ring?
The termination of the external oblique at the pubic tubercle.
What is the definition of an aponeurosis?
layers of broad, flat tendons.
Through what structure does the spermatic cord travel to the scrotum from the abdomen?
Through the inguinal canal
As the spermatic cord passes under the external oblique and through the ring, it carries with it some of the fibers of the external oblique muscle. These fibers become the ________ _______ _______ of the spermatic cord.
external spermatic fascia
What forms the inguinal ligament? What structures does it connect?
Lower aponeurotic fibers of the external oblique. It spans the ASIS and pubic tubercle.
Name the origin and insertion of the internal oblique muscle.
Origin is the lateral half of the inguinal ligament and from the anterior 2/3 of the iliac crest. The internal oblique inserts onto the inferior borders and cartilages of ribs 9-12 and into a broad aponeurosis medially.
What happens to the internal and external oblique muscles at the semilunar line (the lateral border of the rectus abdominis muscle)?
Their respective aponeuroses fuse to form the rectus sheath.
What forms the posterior (dorsal) rectus sheath?
The aponeuroses of half of the internal oblique and all of the transversus abdominis (superior to the arcuate line)
Somewhere between the umbilicus and the pubis the internal oblique aponeurosis is no longer split and the aponeurosis passes anterior to the rectus abdominis muscle. There the internal oblique contributes only to the ______ _______ sheath.
anterior rectus
What tendon is formed by the joining of the medial fibers of the internal oblique aponeurosis and the underlying fibers of the transversus abdominis aponeurosis?
The conjoint tendon aka falx inguinalis
What is the middle fascial layer of the spermatic cord called? From what is this layer derived?
The cremaster fascia, derived from the internal oblique muscle.
What does the cremaster muscle do? What nerves are responsible? What spinal segments are involved? What is this called?
Raises the testes superiorly towards the superficial inguinal ring.
When the superior medial thigh is “stroked,” the ilioinguinal nerve sends the afferent signal and the genitofemoral nerve is the motor efferent to the cremaster muscle. Involves L1 and L2 spinal segments. This is called the cremasteric reflex.
The inferior aponeurosis of the transversus muscle joins with the aponeurosis of the internal oblique muscle to form the _______ tendon just lateral to the pubic symphysis.
conjoint
What is the arcuate line?
The place where the aponeuroses of the obliques and transversus abdominis muscle change the way that they wrap around the rectus abdominis:
Superior to the arcuate line, the aponeurosis of the transversus abdominis and half of the aponeurosis of the internal oblique runs inside (dorsal side) the rectus abdominis, and the other half of the aponeurosis of the internal oblique + the external oblique aponeurosis runs outside (ventral side) the rectus abdominis.
Inferior to the arcuate line, they switch and all run outside the rectus abdominis.