TBL 16 Flashcards
What does the parietal peritoneum line? Visceral peritoneum?
Parietal peritoneum lines the abdominal cavity
Visceral peritoneum invests most of the abdominal viscera.
The peritoneal cavity is the space between the two.
What is the function of the thin peritoneal fluid film that normally occupies the peritoneal cavity?
The peritoneal fluid is composed of water, electrolytes and other things from the surrounding interstitial fluid. It LUBRICATES the peritoneal surfaces, enabling viscera to move over one another without friction, allowing the movements of digestion. It also contains leukocytes and antibodies that RESIST INFECTION.
Why can peritonitis be lethal and why is the linea alba a preferred site for ascites paracentesis?
Peritonitis: infection and inflammation of the peritoneum. Exudation of serum, fibrin, cells and pus into the peritoneum causing pain in the overlying skin and an increase in the tone of the anterolateral abdominal muscles. Given the extent of the peritoneal surfaces and the rapid absorption of the material, including bacterial toxin, from the peritoneal cavity, when peritonitis becomes generalized, the condition is dangerous and lethal.
The linea alba avoids the inferior epigastric artery and other major nerves.
How can peritoneal adhesions cause emergency complications?
limit the normal movement of the viscera
emergency complications: intestinal obstruction when the intestine becomes twisted around an adhesion
Where do the organ primordia form during development?
posterior abdominal wall and protrude to varying degrees into the parietal peritoneum.
Which organs protrude completely into the parietal peritoneum?
Stomach and spleen and this peritoneal investment is defined as visceral peritoneum.
What are intraperitoneal organs?
They are organs invested by the visceral peritoneum.
What are mesentries?
They are continuities of the visceral and parietal peritonea that result from protrusions of intra-peritoneal organs into the parietal peritoneum.
What do the nerves that regionally innervate the abdominal wall also do?
They provide somatic sensory fibers to the parietal peritoneum. This way, distension or irritation of the parietal peritoneum activates the sensory fibers causing sharp, localized pain.
What creates the lesser omentum?
double-layered extension of visceral peritoneum from the anterior and posterior surfaces of the proximal duodenum and stomach
What is the greater omentum?
It is a prominent, four-layered peritoneal fold that hangs down like an apron from the greater curvature of the stomach and proximal part of the duodenum. After descending, it folds back and attaches to the anterior surface of the transverse colon and its mesentery.
How does the phrenic nerve provide an exception to the concept that pressure applied to the parietal peritoneum results in sharp, localized pain?
Pain from the parietal peritoneum is generally well localized, except for that on the inferior surface of the central part of the diaphragm, where innervations is provided by the phrenic nerves. Irritation here is often referred to the C3-C5 dermatomes over the shoulder.
How do functions of the greater omentum relate to its common displacement in the peritoneal cavity?
It is large and fat laden so it prevents the visceral peritoneum from adhering to the parietal peritoneum. It has considerable motility and moves around the peritoneal cavity with peristaltic movements of the viscera. It often forms adhesions adjacent to the an inflamed organ, walling it off and protecting other viscera from it. It is common to find it displaced from normal position.
Where do the greater and lesser sacs lie? What connects them?
A surgical incision through the anterolateral abdominal wall enters the greater sac, the largest part of the peritoneal cavity.
The lesser sac (omental bursa) lies posterior to the stomach and lesser omentum.
The OMENTAL FORAMEN connects the greater and lesser sacs.
What is the transverse mesocolon?
It is the mesentary of the transverse colon and it divides the greater sac into supracolic and infracolic compartments.
What provides free communication between the infracolic and supracolic compartments?
left and right paracolic gutters
How do ascites and cancer cells spread within the peritoneal cavity?
Paracolic gutters!
Material in the abdomen can be transported along the paracolic gutters into the pelvis, especially when the person is upright. Also, infections may extend superiorly to a subphrenic recess situated under the diaphragm, especially when a person is supine.
The paracolic gutters provide pathways fro the spread of cancer cells that have sloughed from the ulcerated surface of a tumor and entered the peritoneal cavity.
What is the embryological derivation of the gut tube?
The gut tube endoderm is surrounded by visceral mesoderm.
In this way, the connective tissue and smooth muscle of the tubular wall are derivatives of the visceral mesoderm.
What are the divisions of the gut tube?
cranial foregut
caudal hindgut
midgut (initially opens to the yolk sac via the vitelline duct)
What are some derivatives of the foregut?
esophagus
stomach
proximal duodenum
the gallbladder, liver and pancreas endodermal buds from the proximal duodenum
What does the midgut and hindgut form?
rest of the GI tract
What are the unpaired branches of the abdominal aorta? Where do they supply?
celiac artery (foregut)
superior mesenteric artery (midgut)
inferior mesenteric artery (hindgut)
Where do vitelline veins pass through en route to the sinus venosus?
septum transversum
Remember: after arising from the duodenum, the liver bud grows into the septum transversum
What do the left and right vitelline veins do?
after draining the duodenum, the left and right vitelline veins enter the liver to form the hepatic sinusoids and hepatic veins!