Middle Mediastinum Flashcards
Boundaries
Anterior: anterior pericardium Posterior: Posterior pericardium Lateral: Mediastinal pleura Inferior: diaphragm Superior: Transverse thoracic plane
Contents
Heart and pericardium Ascending aorta Pulmonary trunk and arteries Pulmonary veins Nerves Lymph nodes
Heart Development
Angiogenic clusters form in the mesoderm and these canalise to from early blood vessels
2 large blood vessels form in the cardiogenic area known as heart tubes
The heart tubes grow and fuse- by 23 the single heart tube begins to fold, which results in ventricles and outflow tracks positioned anteriorly and atria and veins posteriorly
Septa then grow and divide the heart into 4 chambers
Heart Chambers
2 receiving atria, 2 discharging ventricles
Right atrium receives poorly oxygenated blood from SVC and IVS
Right ventricle discharges this into the lungs via pulmonary trunk
Left atrium receives well oxygenated blood from the pulmonary veins
Left ventricle discharges this to the body through aorta
Coordinated contractions of the atrial followed by the ventricles
3 layers of chamber
Endocardium
Myocardium
Epicardium
Fibrous skeleton
Framework of 4 fibrous rings of dense connective tissue
Provides attachment for AV and semi-lunar valves
Forms an electrical insulator between the atria and ventricles
Pericardium
3 layered sac where heart is suspended in by the great vessels
Protects the heart from overfilling
Influenced by movement of the great vessels, sternum and diaphragm
Attaches to first part of great vessels which creates the transverse sinus
Layers of pericardium
- Fibrous pericardium (external)
- Serous Pericardium (internal)
a. parietal layer
b. Visceral layer (or epicardium)
Transverse Sinus
Space between outflow (AA and PT) and inflow vessels (SVC)
Where is pericardial cavity located?
Between the parietal and visceral pericardium and contains small amounts of serous fluid
Coronary circulation
Located in AV groove and interventricular groove
Right and left coronary arteries
Right coronary artery branches
Sinu-atrial nodal
Right marginal
Posterior interventricular
Left coronary artery branches
Anterior interventricular
Diagonal
Circumflex
Left marginal
Anastomoses
These exist between small coronary branches of the RCA and LCA
E.g. End branches of anterior interventricular artery with posterior interventricular artery
There are abundant anastomoses but these don’t maintain substantial collateral circulation if major branch is occluded suddenly
Coronary Artery dominance
Defined by the coronary artery which gives rise to posterior interventricular artery
RCA dominant - 67% of people
15% - LCS dominant where posterior IV artery from the circumflex artery Variation in the LCA and RCA common
4% individuals have an accessory CA
The SA nodal branch comes off the circumflex in 40% of people