Chapter 14 - Head, Face, Neck, & Regional Lymphatics Flashcards
Lymph nodes in front of the ear:
Preauricular
Lymph nodes superficial to the mastoid process:
Posterior auricular
Lymph nodes at the base of the skull:
Occipital
Midline, behind the tip of the manible:
Submental
Lymph nodes halfway between the angle and the tip of the mandible:
Submandibular
Tonsillar lymph nodes, under the angle of the mandible:
Jugulodigastric
Lymph nodes overlying the sternomastoid muscle:
Superficial cervical
Deep lymph nodes, under sternomastoid muscle:
Deep cervical chain
Lymph nodes in the posterior triangle along the edge of the trapezius muscle:
Posterior cervical
Lymph nodes just above and behind the clavicle, at the sternomastoid muscle:
Supraclavicular
Headache of musculoskeletal origin, the most common type, and is also called a stress headache:
Tension headache
Headache of the trigeminal nerve or vascular origin - Typically recurrent & moderate-severe intensity:
Migraine
Rare headache that is intermittent, unilateral, excruciating (with autonomic signs)
Cluster headache
How many mL’s is 1 unit of blood?
250 mL
How much does Hgb increase when 1 unit of blood is given?
It increases by 1