BLOCK C ANATOMY Flashcards
Position of the heart (limits)
Upper limit: sternal angle
Lower limit: xiphisternal joint
Left limit: left midclavicular line
Right limit: right parasternal line-ish
Divisions of the mediastinum
- Superior mediastinum: from sternal angle to rib 1
- Middle mediastinum: holds the heart
- Posterior mediastinum: behind middle, bound by diaphragm and sternal angle
- Anterior mediastinum, front of middle, bound by sternal angle and diaphragm
Contents of the middle mediastinum
- Heart
- Roots of great vessels: aorta, pulmonary trunk and arteries, pulmonary veins, SVC and IVC
- Neurovasculature inside pericardium: coronary circulation, cardiac plexus
- Neurovasculature outside pericardium: phrenic nerves and pericardiacophrenic arteries and veins.
- Respiratory system: primary bronchi (L and R)
Divide the pericardium and the pericardial cavity
- Fibrous pericardium, anchored to the roots of the great vessels
- Serous pericardium (parietal and visceral layers).
- Pericadial cavity situated betweem the two serious pericardial layers.
Where is epicardial vs pericardial fat located?
Pericardial: on the fibrous pericardium
Epicardial: on the visceral layer of the serous pericardium
What are 2 pericardial sinuses?
- Oblique sinus (posterior to the heart)
- Transverse sinus (posterior to aorta and PT)
2 sulci of the heart
Atrioventricular sulcus
Interventricular sulcus
What are the first two branches of the aorta?
Right and left coronary arteries.
Right coronary artery emerges from right aortic valve cusp.
Left coronary artery emerges from left aortic valve cusp.
3 branches of the right coronary artery
- Sinoatrial nodal artery
- Right marginal artery (towards apex on the right margin of heart). Branches off posterior interventricular.
- Posterior interventricular artery (supplies 1/3 of interventricular septum)
3 branches of the left coronary artery
- Anterior interventricular artery (2/3 of interventricular septum)
- Circumflex artery (supplies left atrium)
- Left marginal artery. Branches off circumflex, supplies most of left ventricle.
2 anastemoses in common coronary circulation?
- right coronary artery and circumflex artery
- posterior interventricular artery and anterior interventricular artery
What is the venous drainage of the coronary arteries?
- Great cardiac vein: runs with anterior interventricular artery, then circumflex, into coronary sinus. Drains anterior ventricles and left atrium.
- Middle cardiac vein: runs with posterior interventricular artery. Drains posterior interventricular septum.
- Small cardiac vein: runs with right marginal artery, then with right coronary artery. Drains right atrium and ventricle into coronary sinus.
- Anterior cardiac veins: run with local branches of RCA. Open directly into RA, drains anterior right ventricle.
What is the only vein that does not drain into the coronary sinus?
The anterior cardiac vein.
Is the pulmonary trunk giving rise to pulmonary arteries or pulmonary veins?
Pulmonary arteries.
Emerges from right ventricle
Describe walls of the right atrium.
Posterior wall, where vessels enter: smooth
Anterior wall: pectinate muscle extending into right auricle
Are auricles on the anterior or posterior portion of the heart?
Anterior