Oct29 M2-Ant Triangle Notes Flashcards
neck in transverse section
- post hlf = vertebral compartment
- ant half = one visceral compt in ant middle + two visceral compt in ant lat
- musclofasical collar (a 3rd compt) all around = encloses muscle under skin all around. is a fascia that splits when sees muscle and reunites after
- lot of fat in the neck*
vertebral compt charact
spinal cord + muscles of back and neck. thick fascia around
retropharyngeal space def
- vertical space between vertebral and visceral compts
- from base of skull all way down to mediastinum
- is post to the pharynx
retropharyngeal space clinical relevance
infection or inflammation with necrosis in back of pharynx (starts eating tissue) can enter this space and go all the way down to mediastinum (and it came from oral cavity and throat)
main muscle of musculofascial collar
sternocleidomastoid m.
- O: mastoid process of temporal bone
- I: sternum and clavicle
- FCT: flex neck and turn it in opposite direction. (it pulls on the back of the head on its side)
- separates neck in anterior and posterior triangle
torticollis def
overcontraction of one SCM m.
- top of head tilted to side of that SCM
- base of head tilted to over side (bc that’s fct of SCM)
how to palpate carotid pulse in the nateior triangle
- feel scm
- go halfway to length of scm
- palpate scm anteriorly
big vessels of the neck relating to the scm
- carotid artery under scm medially so we can palpate it
- internal jugular vein under scm lateral to carotid a (hidden under scm)
- external jugular v. right over scm
- 2 smaller anterior jugular veins medially (not in lab)
clinical relevance of the external jugular v
- the most common access route for a central line (central venous access) is the subclavian v
- if not successful and pt has a clear external jugular v, can use it as an alternative
lymph nodes in the neck
called cervical lymph nodes
- many all throughout the neck but some main chains of lymph nodes
- on each side, deep cervical nodes (chain) under scm, along internal jugular v.
- on each side, superficial cervical nodes (chain), along external jugular v.
clinical relevance of superficial cervical nodes (chain)
if palpate them, along external jugular v, can check for bumps of metastasis, swelling, etc.
hyoid bone
- floating bone, not articulating but that has ligs and mm attaching
- creates angle between vertical neck and horizontal floor of mouth (angle created by mm attaching to it)
- U shaped bone (body of hyoid bone = medial part, greater horn = the branches of the hyoid bone + lesser horn = the small bumps on top of hyoid bone medially)
- important for swallowing (goes up and down when swallow)
muscles related to hyoid bone (categories)
infra vs suprahyoid mm
infrahyoid mm (3) charact
depress the upper airways (and the hyoid bone)
- thyrohyoid m (O: thyroid cartilage. I: hyoid)
- sternothyroid m. (O: sternum. I: thyroid cartilage)
- omohyoid m. (O: scapula. I: hyoid)
why hyoid bone depresses when swallow
infrahyoid mm contract it in a coordinated way