Respiratory Anatomy Flashcards
What are the functions of the respiratory system?
- perform gas exchange: get O2 in blood and CO2 in atmosphere
- regulate blood pH; CO2 levels directly affect pH of blood in interstitial fluids because CO2 can combine with water to form carbonic acid (CO2 directly correlates with H+)
- provide for olfaction (smell); gets you away from bad smelling things which might be dangerous
- provide for phonation (sound); draw air across vocal chords and make sounds
What is the framework of the thorax?
- 12 thoracic vertebrae
- 12 pairs of ribs and costal cartilages (gives rib cage flexibility)
- sternum (manubrium, body, xiphoid)
- first 7 ribs come and touch the sternum; true ribs
- 3 more false ribs; they attach to the sternum indirectly by touching the cartilage of the ribs above them
- 2 floating ribs; they don’t come to the front, attached to muscles of the back
- tips of the ribs are cartilage giving some elasticity
- suprasternal notch- can feel trachea just above it
- sternal angle- where body of sternum meets manubrium at 2nd intercostal space, right behind is aortic arch and bifurcation of trachea, good for palpating heart sounds
What type of joint exists between the posterior ribs and thoracic vertebrae?
- synovial joints
- can dislocate it
- costal angle is where bone is weakest so impact will usually break thoracic cage here
- costal groove: contains an intercostal VAN (vein, artery, nerve)
During quiet breathing, what muscles are you recruiting?
- diaphragm: moves down and stomach moves out
- external intercostals: pull ribs up and out
- anteroposterior and superior inferior dimensions of thorax change
How do you exhale in quiet breathing?
- just relax the muscles you used to inhale
- rely on the fact that you stretched out your lungs and there is a lot of elastic tissue
What are the accessory muscles of breathing and what do they do?
- sternocleidomastoid
- scalenes (1st and 2nd rib to get increased anteroposteral dimension of thorax)
- pull up on rib cage
- external intercostals working with them
What muscles are engaged to exhale quickly (not quiet breathing)?
- internal intercostals
- pull rib cage down
- compress thorax and abdomen, elevate diaphragm
- rectus abdominis, external and internal obliques all engaged to pull the ribs down and pushing your viscera against your diaphragm
- transversus abdominis
- force viscera in abdomen up to get air out of lungs
What are the muscles of breathing?
Describe the layers of the intercostals
-dashed line is where it is starting to turn into a tendon
Describe the layers from the lungs outwards of the intercostal VAN
- visceral pleura
- parietal pleura
- pleural space between the above 2: can get effusion in here, blood in here, or air in here then lungs can’t move
- innermost intercostals
- internal intercostals (useful for expiration)
- rib with intercostal groove in inferior border
- vein, artery nerve, slide in behind intercostal groove
- VAN serves the muscle and the nerves innervate the skin lying over the ribs
- nerves are spinal nerves from each level of the thorax (somatic motor neurons- these are voluntary skeletal muscles)
- external intercostals
What is the safest place to go in to aspirate?
-top of rib to avoid VAN
What is the blood supply to the thoracic cage?
- forms anastomosis
- internal thoracic arteries around sternum from subclavian artery
- internal thoracic arteries give rise to intercostal arteries at the front which anastomose with intercostal arteries that arise from back of the thoracic cage which arise from the descending thoracic aorta
What is the venous drainage from the thoracic cage?
- internal thoracic veins come from brachiocephalic vein
- at the back, it drains into hemiazygous vein and azygous vein on the right
- both of these drain into superior vena cava
***listen to this year’s podcast about this again
What is the diaphragm?
- ring of skeletal muscle with aponeurosis in the middle
- innervated by the phrenic nerve
- shaped like a dome
- when it contracts, it pulls dome down to increase volume of lungs
- attaches on inferior border of thoracic cage on free floating ribs
- at the front it attaches on costal cartilages
- supplied by the phrenic nerve
- separates pleural cavity from peritoneal cavity