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thoracic cage
ribs and sternum
sternum
breastbone; composed of the manubrium, body, & xiphoid process
manubrium
the superior portion of the sternum. thickest & widest part.
body of sternum
middle portion of the sternum. longest part.
xiphoid process
inferior "sword like" portion of the sternum
true ribs
ribs 1-7. attach directly to sternum via costal cartilage.
false ribs
ribs 8-12. attach indirectly to sternum by cartilage.
floating ribs
ribs 11 & 12. do not attach to sternum (end in abdominal wall)
How ribs develop
1. Begin as a cartilaginous precursor that is laded invaded by bone-producing cells
2. Ossification starts proximally & moves around the body distally, but stops short of sternum.
3. Part that doesn't ossify becomes costal cartilages.
Synchondrosis
a joint in which 2 bones are united by cartilage
manubriosternal joint (superior sternal
synchondrosis)
synchondrosis between manubrium and body of the sternum
xiphisternal joint (inferior sternal
synchondrosis)
synchrondosis between xiphoid process and body of sternum
costochonral junctions
meeting of bone & cartilage (such as between ribs & costal cartilage)
Sternal Angle (Angle of Louis)
Ridge between manubrium and body at second rib. 2nd costal cartilage can be palpated laterally.
1st rib is hard to feel because
it is covered by the clavicle
Major parts of a rib
head, neck, tubercle, body
articular facets of rib
2 on rib head (articulate with vertebral bodies at superior or inferior costal facets) & 1 on rib tubercle (articulates with transverse process of thoracic vertebra at transverse costal facets)
ligaments of the ribs
Radiate ligament on front of head of rib connecting to body of vertebra. Superior costotransverse ligaments connect rib to transverse costal processes.
-Make ribs hard to dislodge
The heads of the 1st, 11th, and 12th ribs articulate with
only their own corresponding vertebral bodies
All ribs except 1, 11, 12 articulate with
two adjacent vertebrae
thoracoacromial artery
supplies blood to superior shoulder and pectoral regions (both pectoralis major & minor)
lateral pectoral nerve
provides motor innervation to clavicular head of pec major
cephalic vein
a large vein of the arm between deltoid & pec major that empties into the axillary vein
medial pectoral nerve
provides motor innveration to both pectoralis minor and the sternocostal head of pectoralis major
Clavipectoral fascia
dense layer between pectoralis major and minor. has a hole that enables passage of thoracoacromial artery, lateral pectoral nerve, and cephalic vein
pectoralis major
most superficial muscle on anterior chest that consists of 2 heads (1 originates in the medial head of the clavicle & the other the lateral end of the sternum). Inserts on proximal end of humerus.
pectoralis minor
anterior chest muscle deep to pectoralis major that is smaller. Originates in the 3rd, 4th, and 5th ribs. Inserts on the coracoid process of scapula.
long thoracic nerve
provides motor innervation to serratus anterior
lateral thoracic artery
supplies blood to the lateral chest wall
serratus anterior
the 3rd and last serratus muscle. Originates on the anterior medial border of scapula. Inserts on ribs 1-8/9.
external intercostal membrane
the non-muscular tendinous portion of the external intercostal muscle, located just lateral to the sternum in the intercostal space
external intercostals
most superficial intercostals. fibers run proximal to distal. Fibers begin at tubercules of ribs & disappear at costochondral junction.
internal intercostals
Deep to external intercostals. Fibers fun distal to proximal. Fibers begin at posterior axillary line and disappear at sternum.
innermost intercostals
Deepest layer of intercostal muscles. Fibers run distal to proximal. Present only laterally, running from angles of ribs to anterior axillary line.
transversus thoracis
derived from same muscle layer as innermost intercostals but appears medially instead of laterally. Originates at xiphisternal joint. Inserts at 2-6 costochondral junctions.
anterior intercostal arteries
branches of the internal thoracic arteries that supply blood to anterior thoracic wall. immediately deep to internal intercostals. disappear laterally at innermost intercostals.
2 main sources of blood supply to thoracic wall
thoracic aorta and internal thoracic artery (from subclavian artery)
posterior intercostal artery
branch of thoracic aorta that supplies blood to the thoracic wall. longer and wider than anterior intercostal artery (so supplies more blood). has a dorsal branch and a lateral branch.
Dorsal branch of posterior intercostal artery
supplies blood to the thoracic areas innervated by dorsal rami (so intrinsic back muscle)
lateral cutaneous branch of posterior intercostal artery
supplies blood to the side of the thoracic wall (midaxillary region)
anterior intercostal artery
branches from the internal thoracic artery and supplies blood to the intercostal muscles and mammary glands. thinner than posterior intercostal artery (so supplies less blood).
Innveration source for thoracic wall
intercostal nerve
intercostal nerve
systemic nerve in the thoracic cavity that is found between two ribs. branch of ventral rami of T1-T11. Has a lateral cutaneous branch and an anterior cutaneous branch.
lateral cutaneous branch of intercostal nerve
Exits through external intercostal muscle
anterior cutaneous branch of intercostal nerve
exits right before sternum
T7 dermatome
xiphoid process
breast location
-between 2nd and 6th ribs
-extends close to midaxillary line
-sits superficial to pectoralis minor and serratus interior
areola
pigmented area around the breast nipple
Areolar Glands (Glands of Montgomery)
modified sebaceous glands that help lubricate the nipple when nursing & secrete pheromones that promote suckling of an infant
lactiferous ducts
tubes that carry milk within the breast. converge toward nipple and widen into a lactiferous sinus.
lactiferous sinus
Reservoir for milk before it exits the nipple.
mammary glands
modified sweat glands that produce milk
suspensory ligaments (Cooper ligaments)
collagen fibers in the breast that function in support and shape maintenance
subcutaneous fat in the breast
makes up a large amount of breast volume, playing a large role in shape
Breast blood supply & lymphatic drainage
lateral and medial mammary branches
lateral mammary branches
supply blood to lateral side of breast. come from lateral thoracic artery and lateral cutaneous branches of posterior intercostal arteries
medial mammary branches
supply blood to medial side of breast. come from internal thoracic artery and its perforating branches
the lymphatic system functions in both
circulation (by helping collect blood plasma that has leaked through capillary bloods & returning that 15% to the circulatory system after filtering solids), and immunity (T & B lymphocytes)
Lymphatic drainage of the breast
axillary and parasternal nodes
axillary nodes
lateral route of lymphatic breast drainage. 75%.
parasternal nodes
medial route of lymphatic breast drainage. 25%
most (60% of) malignant breast tumors originate in the
upper right quadrant of the breast (nearest to axillary nodes)
level 1 nodes
breast lymph nodes lateral to pec minor. 65% 5 year survival rate for cancer found here.
level 2 nodes
breast lymph nodes central to pec minor. 31% 5 year survival rate for cancer found here.
level 3 nodes
breast lymph nodes medial to pec minor. very low (approx 0)% 5 year survival rate for cancer found here.
x-rays
electromagnetic waves with very short wavelengths and very high energies
how x-rays work
X-rays are fired at the patient through a cathode tube
X-rays are absorbed by materials which are very dense
X-rays are transmitted through materials which are not very dense
The X-rays that pass through are detected by a detector plate to form an X-ray image
Most Radiolucent/Least radiodense to Least
radiolucent/Most radiodense body componets (darkest black to brightest white)
Air, Fat, Water/most tissues, spongy bone, compact bone
PA vs lateral xrays
PA gives front view, lateral gives side view. Use both to get a 3D view.
PA vs AP xrays
PA gives a more accurate sizing of organs, but requires a patient to be able to stand upright. AP gives an artificial enlargement of organs due beams spreading more before hitting, but can be done on an unconscious pt lying down.
Contrast Enhanced (CE) X-rays
a contrast is injected to make arteries appear bone-dense (bright white). used for coronary angiograms.
How CT imagining works
uses xray waves but both pt and xray source are moving. A series of 1mm slices are segmented together to create 3D images.
CT image orientation
images are oriented as if patient were lying supine and observer is viewing from foot of bed (so things on a pt's right would be on the left of the image)
how MRI imaging works
-a magnet creates a magnetic field that puts body's protons in alignment
-a radio frequency coil produces a pulse that knocks protons out of alignment
-protons release energy during realignment, which produces images
MRIs are best for visualizing
soft tissue (muscle, fluid, fat, etc)
T1 MRI
MRI where fat appears the brightest white
T2 MRI
MRI where freestanding fluid appears the brightest white