Y2 Anat
what % of cleft lip cases are associated with cleft palate
50%
trapezius
2 large triangular muscles extending over the back of the neck and shoulders, moving the head and shoulder blade
Meat LLOAF
Median nerve supplies lateral lumbricals, opponens pollicis, adductor pollicis brevis, flexor pollicis brevis
which fascia binds the thyroid gland to the trachea?
pretracheal fascia
venae comitantes
a pair of veins (occasionally more) which closely accompany an artery in such that the pulsations of the artery aid venous return
major function of cerebellum is?
coordinating movements - more neurones there than in the rest of CNS put together
tarsus
ankle / heel / upper foot bones
which structure is found either side of the third ventricle?
diencephalon (mainly the thalamus)
otorrhoea
discharge from the external ear
which kind of cartilage covers the glenoid?
articular
when does rotation of the scapula begin during abduction?
beyond 90 degrees
GABA C receptor is insensitive to what?
bicuculline
coloboma
a hole in one of the structures of the eye, such as the iris, retina, choroid or optic disc
what forms the floor of the cubital fossa
brachialis
which muscle arises from anterior shaft of humerus to insert into the tuberosity of the ulna (coronoid process)
brachialis
deep facial vein
connects the pterygoid venous plexus to the anterior facial vein
how are the tibia and fibula held together?
proximal and distal tibiofibular joints (ant + post tibio-fibular ligaments), and interosseus membrane
which is more lateral, tibia or fibula?
fibula
which is more posterior, foramen rotundum or superior orbital fissure
foramen rotundum
orbital process of frontal bone
frontal bone projects intercranially on left and right to form upper parts of left + right orbit
which bones make up the vault of the skull
frontal, parietal, occipital, squamous temporal, flattened part of sphenoid
which bones around the nose contain air sinuses?
frontal, sphenoid, ethmoid, maxilla
transverse intermuscular septum
septum between the superficial and deep muscles posterior compartment of the leg. connected to the margins of the tibia and fibula
brevis in latin means?
short
name the ligaments which join the femur to the hip bone
iliofemoral, ischiofemoral, zona orbicularis and pubofemoral
floor of femoral triangle
iliopsoas and pectineus
tensor fasciae latae insertion
iliotibial tract, below greater trochanter
gluteus medius origin
ilium - between posterior + anterior gluteal lines
gluteus maximus origin
ilium, between iliac crest + posterior gluteal line. lower sacrum, upper coccyx, and sacrotuberus ligament
3 sections of the innominate bone
ilium, ischium, pubis
ulnar paradox
injuring the ulnar nerve at elbow actually appears less deformed(less claw hand) than if injured at the wrist - despite the damage being worse.
boutonniere deformity
injury/inflammation tears central slip of extensor digitorum, such that it separates and the head of the proximal phalanx pops through the gap (like a buttonhole)
which layer of the eyeball contains the photoreceptors?
inner layer of eyeball wall; the retina
superior gemellus insertion
inner surface of greater trochanter with obturator internus + inferior gemellus
which cords of the brachial plexus are destined to supply flexors?
lateral and medial cords
name the distal continuation of the musculotaneous nerve into the forearm
lateral antebrachial cutaneous nerve AKA lateral cutaneous nerve of the forearm
dorsal tubercle radius
small prominence on dorsal aspect of distal radius, lateral to the groove for the extensor pollicis longus tendon. serves as a trochlea (pulley) for the tendon
how do the flexor digitorum superficialis tendons insert?
splits into two slips at PIP, and inserts into the proximal end of each medial phalaynx
describe adduction in the hand
spreading out of the fingers
name 4 parts of temporal bone
squamous (flat, forms vault), mastoid process (felt behind ear), styloid process (needle sticking down in front of ext. aud. meatus), petrous (very hard internal skull base bone)
name the part of the occipital bone posterior to the foramen magnum
squamous part of occipital bone
name the part of the occipital bone which is behind the foramen magnum
squamous part of occipital bone
how do you check for a ruptured achilles tendon?
squeeze triceps surae (the major calf muscles which insert into the tendon). plantar flexor should occur - if not there is a rupture
what is the most important function of the coracoclavicular ligament?
stabilising AC joint - retaining the clavicle in contact with the acromion
corticospinal tract
pyramidal tract of upper motoneurons from cerebral cortex to spinal cord. most important descending motor tract; controlling contralateral muscles.
quadratus femoris insertion
quadrate tubercle on back of greater trochanter
which auditory ossicle is *not* formed by the maxillary prominence?
stapes. formed by reichert's cartilage (pharyngeal arch 2)
name the joint between the clavicle and the manubrium
sternoclavicular joint
which joint is the only true articulation between the trunk and the pectoral girdle?
sternoclavicular joint
in clavicle fractures, which muscle pulls the medial half up?
sternocleidomastoid
scissor walking
stiffness/spasticity in ankles - as if you're walking points of scissors across a table. sign of UMN lesion
transverse ligament of the atlas
strong band which arches across the ring of the atlas, and holds the odontoid process in place from behind
clavipectoral fascia
strong fascia situated deep to pec major, in the interval between pec minor and subclavius. protects the axillary vessels and nerves
fibular collateral ligament
strong fibrous band from femur to head of fibula (lateral side of knee joint)
radial collateral ligament (elbow)
strong ligament/group of ligaments on lateral aspect of elbow. stabilizes joint in many ways (annular ligament =part of this ligament)
axillary artery is a continuation of which artery?
subclavian artery
vertebral arteries are branches of?
subclavian artery
which key structures can be damaged /compressed by a cervical rib?
subclavian vessels + brachial plexus; particularly lower nerve roots (weakens small muscles of hand) together called *thoracic outlet syndrome*
neostriatum
subcortical part of forebrain; important input within the basal ganglia formed from the caudate and putamen
short saphenous vein
subcutaneous vein of the posterior/lateral lower leg
which is usually more extensive, subdural or extradural haemorrhage?
subdural
femoral triangle
subfascial space in inner thigh; appears as a triangular depression inferior to the inguinal ligament
which one eye muscle is innervated by the trochlear nerve?
superior oblique
substantia nigra
layer of deeply pigmented grey matter in midbrain, involved in metabolic disturbances associated with Parkinson's + Huntington's disease
name the 3 bony processes from the vertebral arch
left + right transverse processes, and spinal process
putamen and globus pallidus together are called what?
lentiform nucleus
thalamic syndrome
lesions causes by stroke etc most often cause an initial lack of sensation/tingling contralaterally. weeks later, this can develop into severe + chronic pain all over contralateral body, so bad as to cause suicide
insertion of psoas major
lesser trochanter
abductor pollicis longus
lies below supinator in posterior lateral forearm. abducts the thumb
bankart lesion
tear of the anterior glenoid labrum due to shoulder dislocation. forms a pocket at the front of glenoid that allows the humeral head to dislocate into it
hallux
the big toe
which two major openings for blood vessels are found medial to the temporal styloid process
the carotid canal (passing forwards) and jugular foramen (passing backwards)
what obscures the dorsal surface of the pons?
the cerebellum
what does 'buccal' mean in latin?
the cheek
which structures move in acromioclavicular joint seperation?
the clavicle in fact remans where it was - but the entire shoulder girdle drops with the weight of the arm
the floor of popliteal fossa
the knee joint capsule (covered by posterior oblique ligament and popliteus muscle) + femur
the forearm extensor muscles superficial layer all arise from where?
the lateral epicondyle
which arteries feed the internal capsule in the brain?
the lateral striate arteries
which brain ventricle(s) produce the most CSF?
the lateral ventricles
which parts of the nose and orbit does the maxilla form?
the lateral wall of the nose, and the floor of the orbit
what part of the nasal cavity is formed by the ethmoid bone?
the lateral walls and the perpendicular plate
the short head of the biceps runs medial to which tubercle?
the lesser tubercle of humerus
where does the tendon of the subscapularis insert?
the lesser tubercle of humerus
which main part of the pinna has no fibrocartilagenous support?
the lobule
which part of the malleus attaches to the interior tympanic membrane?
the long handle
which head of the biceps runs between the bicipital groove?
the long head (the short head takes the shortcut medial to lesser tubercle)
where does the teres major arise from?
the lower lateral border of the posterior surface of the scapular blade
when chewing on one side of mouth , how is bite force increased?
the mandible transfers force such that muscles on *both side of face* are used
what articulates with the medial end of the clavicle?
the manubrium
what forms the margins of the superior thoracic aperture
the manubrium, the first ribs, their costal cartilages, and the body of T1 vertebra
what does the linea aspera divide into inferiorly?
the medial and lateral supracondylar lines
the serratus anterior holds which border of the scapula against the chest wall?
the medial border
in development, what fuses to form the intermaxillary process?
the medial nasal processes
through the foramen magnum, the spinal cord is continuous with what?
the medulla
spinal meninges
the membranes that envelope + protect the CNS. consist of three layers: dura mater, the arachnoid mater, and the pia mater
name the most rostral part of the brainstem
the midbrain
what is the scapula region?
the scapula and the muscles which sandwich it
what forms the base of the axilla?
the skin of the armpit
axial skeleton
the skull and spinal column and sternum and ribs
joint congruence
the surfaces of a joint are equal; their 3D shapes fit perfectly (usually allows for a stable joint but less degrees of freedom)
what is the most superficial structure *within* the popliteal fossa?
the tibial nerve
what are the lateral and medial menisci
the two c shaped fibrocartilages attached to the medial and lateral condyles of the proxial tibia
what should you be able to see when observing through an auriscope?
the tympanic membrane; the malleus (long handle), post&ant malleolar folds, flaccid part of membrane between them, and a reflected cone of light
why is claw hand more pronounced in medial 2 fingers
they have no median nerve innervation
obturator membrane
thin fibrous sheet which almost completely closes the obturator foramen
vomer
thin trapezoidal bone of the skull forming the posterior and inferior parts of the nasal septum
which superficial vessel drains the medial aspect of the foot
long saphenous vein
spinal shock
loss of sensation accompanied by motor paralysis with initial loss but gradual recovery of reflexes, following a spinal cord injury
peroneus tertius origin
lower 1/4 anterior fibula
name the two distal projections of the femur
medial and lateral condyle
which nerve innervates flexors of the forearm and thenar muscles
median
masseter
muscle that runs through the rear part of the cheek from the temporal bone to the lower jaw - raises (hence closes) lower jaw in chewing
submandibular space is below which muscle?
mylohyoid
meckel's cartilage
on each side of jaw, form hyaline cartilagenous bar of mandibular arch
what key actions do fontanelles enable?
movement of skull bones. useful in birth canal, when they can deform/squeeze smaller, and during childhood (expanding to accomodate growing brain)
function of buccinator?
moves food from check + between teeth (cleans teeth) and acts as a valve that prevents air forcing into the parotid duct, which runs through it
which ACh receptors are inhibitory?
muscarinic receptors 2 and 4
discribe hyperextension in the fingers
over extension at the joints - eg bending fingers back
does the brachial plexus pass over or under the first rib and clavicle?
over first rib and under clavicle
which disease makes the vault bones look like cotton wool?
pagets disease
pontine nuclei
part of the pons involved in motor activity - millions of nuclei. fibres from them send across to the cerebellum
quadrate ligament
part of the proximal radioulnar joint. joins to inferior border of radial notch on ulna and to neck of radius
what does the squamous temporal bone form in the medial cranial fossa?
part of the side wall (extends on into cranial vault)
how does popliteus enter the knee joint?
passes through a hole in the knee capsule
when discussing the foot, which term can be used instead of inferior?
plantar
nasion
point at the bridge of the nose where the frontal and nasal bones of the skull meet
are the rotator cuff muscles posterior or anterior to the shoulder joint?
posterior
where do you palpate the posterior tibial artery pulse?
posterior and inferior to medial malleolus
posterior axillary fold
posterior boundary of axilla consisting of latissimus dorsi and teres major muscles
which artery supplies the thalamus
posterior cerebral artery
diencephalon
posterior part of the forebrain, containing the epithalamus, thalamus, hypothalamus, and ventral thalamus and the third ventricle
flexor digitorum longus origin
posterior surface of tibia
examples of foetal alcohol syndrome facial defects
thin upper lip • rounded, indistinct philtrum • midface flat (hypoplasia). short upturned nose - flat nasal bridge • Small palpebral fissures (eyelids) • Epicanthal folds (upper eyelid) • Microcephaly (small head) • Micrognathia (small chin)
how is neurogenesis linked to depression?
things which decrease neurogenesis are known to increase depression
why do more nuclei project from the visual cortex to the lateral geniculate nucleus than the other way around?
this is unknown
flexor digitorum longus nerve supply
tibial nerve
vastus lateralis insertion
tibial tuberosity via patella
torsion
tortuous and twisted shape or position
where does herpes zoster lie latent
trigeminal and dorsal root ganglia
name the Vth cranial nerve
trigeminal nerve
describe the arteries in the hands
two 'arches' (superficial and deep) formed from anastomoses of radial and ulnar arteries. branch into palmar digital arteries
pronator teres
two-headed forearm muscle; serves to pronate the forearm
biceps brachii
two-headed upper arm muscle arising from the scapula (coracoid process/supraglenoid tubercle) and attaches to elbow (radial tuberosity/bicipital aponeurosis
lateral wall of middle ear
tympanic membrane
which bone lines most of the external auditory meatus
tympanic plate of temporal bone
volar ganglion
type of ganglion cyst located on the 'volar' (palmar) side of the wrist
mucous cyst
type of tiny ganglion cyst at distal interphalangeal joint. causes growth deformity eg nail plate depression and grooves
which nerve is the continuation of the medial cord of brachial plexus?
ulnar
what is the largest unprotected (by muscle or bone) nerve in the body?
ulnar nerve
which nerve supplies flexor carpi ulnaris?
ulnar nerve
tibialis anterior origin
upper half of lateral tibia
gracilis insertion
upper medial tibia
sartorius insertion
upper medial tibia
plantaris action
weak plantarflexor at ankle (vestigial structure
can CNS neurons regenerate into PNS grafts?
yes
do lymph vessels have valves?
yes (lots!) except none in lymph capillaries
cubital fossa
'elbow pit' containing median nerve, brachial artery, biceps tendon
5 types of glia in CNS
1.Astrocytes 2. Oligo- dendrocy tes 3. Microglia 4. Ependyma 5. NG2 cells
how many lobules are found in the cerebellum?
10 (roman numerals - 'H' prefix used to refer specifically to hemispheral part)
cerebellum forms what % of total brain volume?
10%
rectus femoris origin
Anterior *inferior* iliac spine
functions of clavicle
assists shoulder movement. transmits force from upper limb to thorax. only bony connection
soleus origin
back of head + upper 1/3 shaft of fibula. middle 1/3 medial border tibia
what type of joint connects the incus to the stapes?
ball and socket
pectineus origin
base of pubis
dorsiflexion
bending backward
where is the acromio-clavicular joint?
between the acromion process of the scapula and the clavicle
3 anterior muscles of arm
biceps brachii, brachialis, coracobrachialis
the two main supinator muscles of forearm
biceps brachii, supinator
which is the only muscle which can produce lateral rotation of the lower leg at the knee joint
biceps femoris (inserted into the fibula)
median cleft is AKA?
bifid nose, or frontonasal dysplasia
quadriceps
big 4-part muscle at the front of thigh, acts to extend the leg and flex thigh. consists of rectus femoris muscle and the three vasti muscles
subconjunctival haemorrhage
bleeding deep to the conjunctiva; appears bright red under transparent conjunctiva
navicular
boat-shaped bone in ankle between the talus and the cuneiform bones
posterior iliac spines
bony prominances at the posterior end of the iliac crest
give a non-traumatic cause of median nerve damage at the wrist
carpal tunnel syndrome
afferent nerve fibres
carry impulses into the CNS (sensory fibres)
reichert's cartilage
cartilages from pharyngeal arch 2
anterior triangle of neck
bounded by jugular notch, anterior margin of sternocleidomastoid, and inferior mandible. contains suprahyoid and infrahyoid muscles
which forearm muscle has extensor origin/innervation but in fact comes round anteriorly and flexes the elbow?
brachioradialis
which muscle enables flexion of the elbow when hand is pronated?
brachioradialis
do spinal nerves emerge caudal or cranial to their corresponding vertebra?
caudal (except for C1-C7 which emerge cranial)
name the different parts of the basal ganglia
caudate nucleus, globus pallidus, putamen, subthalamic nucleus, substantia nigra
which kind of vertebrae have transverse foramina
cervical
superior orbital fissure
cleft in each orbital cavity of skull, lying between the lesser and greater wings of the sphenoid bone
bilateral cleft lip
cleft that occurs on both sides of the lip (about 10% of cleft lip cases)
unilateral cleft lip
cleft that occurs on one side of face (about 90% of cleft lip cases)
peroneus longus action
everts foot, plantarflexes ankle
sacrotuberous ligament
extends from ischial tuberosity to lateral margins of sacrum and coccyx
outer surface of tympanic membrane concave or convex?
concave
hypoglossal canal is AKA?
condylar canal
endoneurium
connective tissue layer around myelin sheath of each myelinated nerve fiber
which is most medial, trapezoid or conoid ligament?
conoid
which muscles form the lateral wall of the axilla?
coracobrachialis, short + long heads of biceps
why does upper motoneuron lesion cause positive babinski sign?
corticospinal tract
anterior sternoclavicular ligament
covers the anterior surface of the joint between the sternum and clavicle
two roots of cranial nerve
cranial accessory root (brainstem) and spinal accessory root (cervical plexus)
spinal accessory nerve
cranial nerve XI. exits skull through jugular foramen, pierces sternocleidomastoid, travels back to supply trapezius
conus elasticus is aka?
cricovocal membrane
infrapatellar fat pad
cylindrical piece of fat that is situated under and behind the patella
problems with hearing/balance + facial expression muscles indicate what?
damage to the 7th&8th cranial nerves at their close emergence between pons + medulla
mallet finger
damage/tear to the extensor digitorum tendon at the DIP joint; sufferers are unable to extend this joint
opponens pollicis
deepest thenar muscle in anterior hand which opposes the thumb
ampulla
dilated portion of a canal/duct especially of the semicircular canals of the ear
dupuytren's contracture
disease of not tendons but palmar fascia. fixed forward curvature of fingers, caused by fibrous connections between finger tendons and the skin of the palm. usually affects ulnar side more than radial
where do the deep layer of extensor forearm muscles arise?
distal part of ulna and the surrounding interosseous membrane
primary fissure cerebellum
divides anterior and posterior lobes of cerebellum
posterolateral fissure cerebellum
divides flocculonodular lobe from rest of cerebellum
in a TS spinal cord, which is longer, the dorsal or ventral horn?
dorsal horn
maxillary prominence
dorsal process formed by bifurcation of tissue anterior to/in the first pharyngeal arch in the embryo. fuses with nasal processes to form upper jaw + cheeks
where are the cell bodies of primary sensory neurons?
dorsal root ganglia
which is the more medial projection, the radial styloid process or the dorsal tubercle of radius?
dorsal tubercle of radius
name some typical diseases which reveal themselves as a lower motoneuron sign
Peripheral neuropathies, Injury in dorsal/ventral root, e.g. herniated vertebral disc, Polio myelitis - virus kills motoneurons, Myasthenia gravis - decreased neuromuscular transmission• Muscular dystrophy - primary muscle disease
lateral ventricles
each of the first and second ventricles in the center of each cerebral hemisphere
cerebral hemisphere
each of the two parts of the cerebrum (left and right)
flexor digitorum longus insertion
each tendon passes through Flx.Digt.brevis tendon + into distal phalaynx of toes 2-5
what happens in brachial plexus behind the clavicle?
each trunk divides into posterior and anterior divisions
what are the two peak ages in life to have a first-time shoulder dislocation?
early 20s and 60s
name all the carpals
Some Lovers Try Positions That They Can't Handle Scaphoid, Lunate, Triquetrum, Pisiform, Trapezium, Trapezoid, Capitate, Hamate
palpebral fissures
elliptic space between the medial and lateral canthi of the two open lids
aside from FGF receptor mutations, which gene mutations have been linked to craniosynostosis?
TWIST1, MSX2, and EFNB1
angle of femoral torsion
The angle of the femoral neck relative to the femoral condyles (most easily seen by looking 'head on' at the femur from below). should be ~20°
hilton's law
The motor nerve to a muscle tends to give a branch of supply to the joint which the muscle moves and another branch to the skin over the joint
hyoid bone
U-shaped bone in the neck that supports the tongue, palpable in neck just above thyroid cartilage
which fluid fills the membranous labrinth?
endolymph
name connective tissue layer around myelin sheath of each myelinated nerve fiber
endoneurium
name the anterior part of the parahippocampal gyrus
entorhinal cortex
afferent lymph vessels carry lymph to what?
a lymph node
which bones form the orbit
ethmoid bone, frontal bone, zygomatic, maxilla, lacrimal, sphenoid
how does dopamine affect the basal ganglia direct pathway?
activates it (hence increases movement)
pectineus action
adducts + flexes thigh
action of adductor longus
adducts + laterally rotates thigh. can flex the extended thigh
name the 6 deep muscles of the posterior forearm from proximal to distal
anconius, supinator, abductor pollicis longus, extensor pollicis longus and brevis, extensor pollicis longus, extensor indicis
name two diseases which occur when the neural tube does not seal closed in CNS development?
anencephaly and spina bifida
which forearm muscle mass is larger, anterior or posterior muscles?
anterior (flexion requires more effort)
name 4 fontanelles
anterior (main one), anterolateral, postior, posterolateral
name the 2 nerves which supply the anterior and posterior external auditory meatus
anterior = trigeminal posterior = vagus
which ligaments are present *within the knee joint itself*
anterior and posterior cruciate ligaments
where can you palpate a pulse in the dorsalis pedis artery ?
anterior ankle, in the midpoint between the malleoli (where the artery arises under the extensory retinaculum)
at which muscle border can the chain of neck lymph nodes be felt?
anterior border of sternocleidomastoid
anterior axillary fold
anterior boundary of axilla. quite rounded. formed by lower border of peck major
where does the great saphenous vein begin?
anterior to medial malleolus
name the 3 divisions of the floor of the cranial cavity
anterior, middle, posterior cranial fossae
3 major transverse divisions of cerebellar cortex
anterior, posterior, and flocculo-nodular lobes
angular gyrus
fold in inferior parietal lobe formed by the united posterior ends of the superior + middle temporal gyri. involved in processing audio/visual input and comprehending language
name the folds in the cerebellum
folia
primary prevention of NTDs is most famously what?
folic acid
what may happen if the protective role of the larynx becomes ineffective?
food/fluid may be aspirated into the trachea
why doesn't strychnine cause any inhibitory effects?
it acts as a glycine antagonist everywhere except at NMDA receptors (hence glycines one excitatory role is not interfered with)
obturator nerve arises where?
from the lumbar plexus high in posterior abdominal wall. L2-L4
where does pec major take origin?
from the medial half of the clavicle + the front of the sternum, costal cartilages and upper external oblique aponeurosis
infundibulum means what in latin?
funnel
femoral sheath
funnel-shaped sheath of fascial tissue extending from the fascial lining of abdomen into the upper thigh; encases the femoral neurovascular bundle deep to the inguinal ligament
saccule of larynx
fusiform fossa, situated between the vestibular and vocal folds on either side, and extending nearly their entire length
semitendinosus action
flexes knee, extends hip. can medially rotate flexed knee
gastrocnemius action
flexes knee, plantarflexes ankle
flexor hallucis action
flexes phalanges of great toe
quadrangular space: boundaries and contents
gap between teres major, minor, and long + lateral heads of triceps, through which axillary nerve + posterior humeral circumflex artery passes
the two heads of which muscle arise from the lateral and medial condyles of the femur?
gastrocnemius (medial head and lateral head)
what does the lingual nerve supply to the tongue?
general sensation across most of it
which structures can be imagined as a 'hammock' of the shoulder joint?
glenohumeral ligaments
what is the shoulder capsule attached to?
glenoidal labrum and anatomical neck & shaft of humerus
what nerve supplies the gag reflex (and its surrounding area)
glossopharyngeal
muscles in medial compartment of thigh
gracilis adductor longus adductor brevis adductor magnus pectineus obturator externus
conoid ligament
helps attach clavicle to scapula; runs from the conoid tubercle to the base of the coracoid process
piriformis insertion
highest point of greater trochanter
before rising up to supply the tongue muscles, where is the hypoglossal nerve found?
hyoglossus
which nerve canal is located in the occipital bone, just above the occipital condyle?
hypoglossal canal
all muscles of the tongue are supplied by which nerve
hypoglossal nerve
sleep and wakefulness is mainly controlled by which part of the brain?
hypothalamus
why do you plantar flex your foot when you step on something?
if standing, this will raise the heel off the ground through pushing your toes down
what is defined as torsion of the femur?
if the angle of femoral torsion (between femoral neck and femoral condyles) is deviated from 20°, torsion of femur is said to exist
origin of iliacus
iliac fossa (internal wing of ilium) and sacrum
tensor fasciae latae origin
ilium; anterior 1/5th iliac crest, + ASIS
why can cysts easily grow in the thyroid?
it has a high osmotic pressure, so water is trying to be drawn in and make it grow outwards
what is special about occipital bone which enables skull to 'contract' during birth and quickly reexpand after?
it is not fully ossified until shortly after birth; means it can slide over other skull bones
why is the medial meniscus more often injured than lateral?
it is not so mobile/circular in shape as the lateral
why is external branch of superior laryngeal nerve susceptible to damage during thyroidectomy or cricothyrotomy?
it lies immediately deep to the superior thyroid artery
in what direction are you most likely to dislocate your shoulder and why?
it slips downwards and out of the glenoid fossa (the shoulder joint is protected from above and either side, but is weakest inferiorly)
why is the axillary nerve most commonly injured nerve in shoulder dislocation?
it wraps around the surgical neck of the humerus from posterior to anterior. dislocated shoulders put traction on it
which structure divides the vertebral arch into a pedicle and a lamina?
it's transverse processes; anteriorly , between them and the body is called the pedicle. the rest is the lamina
the 3 static (non-contractile) stabilisers of the shoulder joint
labrum, glenohumeral ligaments, capsule
what is 'flat feet' ?
lack of shock-absorbing longitudinal and transverse arches in the foot (puts more wear on the knee joint
which neurovascular structures pass through the superior orbital fissure but *not* through the tendinous ring?
lacrimal nerve + frontal nerve, (both branches of V1), trochlear nerve, opthalmic vein (superior + inferior branches)
name the point at which the occipital bone meets the parietal bones in the midline
lambda
name the posterior, thick part of the cricoid cartilage
lamina of cricoid
talus
large bone in the ankle that articulates with the tibia of the leg and the calcaneum and navicular bone of the foot
suprapatellar bursa
large bursa above/in front of knee, continuous with the synovial cavity of the joint. shown in picture as 'F'
subscapular fossa
large flat anterior surface of scapula (the 'blade')
jugulodigastric node
large node found near where the posterior belly of the digastric muscle crosses the internal jugular vein. if enlarged, think tonsilitis/strep
cavernous sinus
large pool of venous blood either side of pituitary fossa, covered by dura to prevent spillage. important structures pass through it
cephalic vein
large superficial vein of the upper limb
is a larger or smaller semilunar canal more sensitive?
larger
ventral spinal artery
largest artery of spinal cord. arises from branches of vertebral arteries; supplies anterior and *most of posterior* spinal cord. runs in the subarachnoid space, surrounded by CSF
broadly, where does cerebellar output travel to?
lateral cerebellum = up to thalamus + motor cortex. intermediate parts = to red nucleus. medial parts = to vestibular nuclei
origin of popliteus
lateral condyle inside knee joint capsule
plantaris origin
lateral epicondyle of femur
which nuclei of thalamus is involved in the visual pathway? what role does it play?
lateral geniculate nucleus (receives the optic nerve/tract, passes info on to calcarine cortex/area V1/17)
gastrocnemius origin
lateral head = lateral epicondyle (and suprcondylar line) of femur. medial head = surface of femur above med. epicondyle.
name the sheet of fascia which stretches from the linea aspera laterally (between muscles) towards the fascia lata
lateral intermuscular septum
which nerve supplies clavicular head of pectoralis major
lateral pectoral nerve
what type of rotation of the humerus accompanies abduction?
lateral rotation
which is more superior, the lesser or greater wing of the sphenoid?
lesser
the upper margin of the superior orbital fissure is part of which sphenoid bone wing?
lesser wing
intercranially, what forms the posterior margin of the anterior cranial fossa?
lesser wing of sphenoid
flocculonodular lobe forms which lobule of cerebellum?
lobule ten
interossei of hand
intrinsic dorsal and palmar muscles near the metacarpal which on dorsal side abduct, and palmar side adduct
jugular foramen
iregular-shaped foramen, anterolateral to foramen magnum. formed in front by the petrous temporal, and behind by the occipital. larger on RHS
superior gemellus origin
ischial spine (upper margin of lesser sciatic notch)
which supplies blood to face and neck, the internal or external carotid artery?
external
name the opening just posterior to the temporomandibular joint
external auditory meatus (aka ear canal)
which artery can be felt pulsing under the jaw, a few cm lateral to the chin?
facial artery
which artery arises just above the lingual artery? from which vessel does it arise?
facial artery, from the external carotid
what shape is the body of a cervical vertebra?
fairly small and wide; rectangular
ventral rami only have motor fibres. true/false?
false. ventral roots only have motor fibres, but these are different to rami, which are combos of fibres from ventral and dorsal roots
deep fascia of the thigh AKA
fascia lata
vastus intermedius nerve supply
femoral nerve (L2,L3)
what are the 2 largest bones in the body?
femur then the tibia
the glandular tissue of the breast is divided into lobes by what?
fibrous septa which pass from pectoral fascia, through fat, to skin
what is 'roof' of tarsal tunnel
flexor retinaculum
which lobe of cerebellum controls balance/eye movements?
flocculonodular lobe
name cranial nerve V3
mandibular nerve
which division of the trigeminal sensory ganglion does the motor component of the trigeminal nerve run with?
mandibular nerve (V3)
which muscles are supplied by the median nerve?
many of the lower anterior flexor muscles of the arm (eg wrist, thumb muscles)
tibialis anterior insertion
medial side of medial cuneiform + first metatarsal
semitendinosus insertion
medial surface of upper shaft of tibia
how can the coracoid process be used to protect important structures during surgery?
medial to it is a no-go zone due to the presence of the brachial plexus
the medial and lateral walls of the orbit face in which direction
medial wall = directly forward, lateral wall = about 45 degrees outwards
3 main parts of brainstem
midbrain, pons, medulla
which is deeper, gluteus minimus, medius or maximus?
minimus
what does low FGF activity induce in the cranial sutures?
mitosis (maintains the cartilage in the sutures)
is the brachial plexus sensory or motor innervation?
mixture of both
what shape is the body of a thoracic vertebra?
more of a heart shape
in the hand, which parts of skin are made sensory by the radial nerve?
most of the dorsal surface of the hand (excluding the little finger on the ulnar side, and the fingertips)
in the hand, which parts of skin are made sensory by the median nerve?
most of the palm, (except the little finger on ulnar side) and the fingertips on the dorsal side
through which kind of receptors can ACh have both an excitatory & inhibitory effect
muscarinic (nicotinic is only excitatory)
muscarine is an agonist for which ACh receptors?
muscarinic receptors 1,3 and 5 (*only the excitatory muscarinic receptors)
brachialis
muscle deep to biceps brachii which assists in flexing the elbow
flexor pollicis longus
muscle in the deep anterior forearm that flexes the thumb
flexor digitorum profundus
muscle in the deep anterior layer of forearm that flexes the fingers
Orbicularis oculi
muscle in the face that closes the eyelids
the 2 major proteins in CNS myelin
myelin PLP (proteolipid protein) and myelin basic protein (MBP) form ~80%
turbinate bones are AKA
nasal concha bones
dorsal root ganglion
nodule on a dorsal root of the spine. contains cell bodies of sensory neurons
greater and lesser sciatic notch
notches in the ilium and ischium respectively which helf create foramens in the posterior pelvis
basal ganglia
nuclei deep in the brain with motor functions. They are sites of degeneration in Huntingtons's disease and Parkinson's disease, which give rise to dyskinesias
obturator internus origin
obturator membrane (lateral half of inner surface)
gracilis nerve suppy
obturator nerve anterior division
foramen magnum is located in which bone
occipital
who is at greatest risk of a femoral neck fracture?
old osteoporotic women
which cells myelinate neurons in the CNS?
oligodendrocytes
mossy fibres cerebellum
one of the major inputs to cerebellum. bring info from cortex, vestibular nuclei, spinal cord + reticular formation, via middle and inferior cerebellar peduncles, to granule cells
craniosynostosis
one or more fibrous sutures in an infant skull prematurely fuses by turning into bone, changing the growth pattern of the skul
tracheostomy
opening a direct airway through an incision in the trachea. more common in non-emergency situations than emergency
anterior cruciate ligament origin and insertion
origin: anterior intercondylar region of tibia. insertion: inner surface of lateral condyle of femur
scalenous medius origin + insertion
origin: anterior transverse process tubercles of first 4-5 C vertebrae. inserts on lateral edge of first rib
latissimus dorsi
pair of large muscles covering the lower back, extending from sacral, lumbar, and lower thoracic vertebrae to the armpits
levator scapulae
pair of muscles in posterior neck which raises the scapula
aryteniod cartilages
pair of small pyramids which form part of the inner wall of larynx
subclavian artery
paired arteries. supply blood to the neck and arms. left subclavian = 3rd branch of aortic arch
parachordal cartilage
paired cartilages in developing forebrain which form part of the chondrocranium (the base of occipital bone)
hypophyseal cartilage
paired cartilages in developing forebrain which form part of the chondrocranium (the body of sphenoid bone)
cleft palate
palatial shelves fail to fuse
dilator pupilae: parasympathetic or sympathetic?
para
occipital somites (mesodermal cells) form which cartilages of the chondrocranium?
parachordal cartilages
what closes the fenestra vestibuli opening?
part of the stapes
alimentary canal
passage from mouth to anus
meatus
passage or opening in the body, especially one which is open to the exterior
what does the anterior division of obturator nerve do?
passes over obturator externus to lie inbetween superficial + middle strata of adductor muscles (supplies adductor longus + brevis, pectineus + gracilis)
which muscles in medial compartment of thigh ARENT supplied by obturator nerve?
pectineus (usually femoral n instead) and posterior part of adductor magnus (tibial part of sciatic nerve)
name the regions which form the anterior, superior and posterior walls of the axilla respectively
pectoral region, deltoid region and scapular region
Volkmann's ischaemic contracture
permanent flexion contracture of the hand at the wrist, resulting in a claw-like deformity of the hand and fingers, more common in children
patients shoes are too tight, has bitemporal hemianopia. what is likely diagnosis
pituitary tumour (over producing growth hormones + optic nerve pushed up)
which muscles are larger, ones for dorsiflexion or plantar flexion of the foot? why?
plantar - because plantar flexion involves lifting the whole body (whereas dorsi- is just lifting the foot)
tibialis posterior action
plantar flex ankle, invert foot
soleus action
plantarflexes ankle
radial styloid
point at lateral distal radius. brachioradialis tendon and radial collateral ligament of wrist attaches here
obex
point in the caudal medulla where the fourth ventricle narrows to become the central canal of spinal cord. decussating of sensory fibers happens at this point
which muscle is partly covered by the posterior oblique ligament
popliteus
what is the only muscle capable of *initiating* the lateral pull / abduction of vocal cords
posterior cricoarytenoid
which 4 groups muscles surround the cervical vertebral column?
posteriorly a strong extensor mass (prevents head dropping down onto chest). anteriorly weak flexor prevertebral muscles. laterally, rotators and lateral flexors
mGLU-R
pre and post-synaptic GPCRs which binds to glutamate, found in hippocampus, cerebellum, cerebral cortex etc
neural crest cells form which cartilages of the chondrocranium?
prechordal cartilages
metopic suture
present from birth to around 2 years of age; divides the frontal bone in half (down the midline)
how might a cervical rib induce digital gangrene?
pressure on subclavian artery obstructs circulation
thyroid is tied to the trachea by what?
pretracheal fascia
how does the palate develop?
primary palate formed by extension of intermaxillary process. 2ndary palette by 'palatine shelves' growing medially from maxillary prominences, and fusing with each other and the nasal septum
the only axons leaving the cerebellum are the axons of which cells?
purkinje cells
how do you test the trapezius muscle
put both hands on patients shoulder and ask them to shrug them
what shape is the axilla?
pyramid
occasionally, in track of migration of thyroid tissue, a streak of fibres is left behind extending up anteriorly in the midline. what is it called?
pyramidal lobe
difference between pyramidal and extrapyramindal tracts
pyramidal originate in cerebral cortex (pass through the medullary pyramids). involved in *voluntary* muscle control of body + face. extrapyramidal originate in brainstem (don't pass through pyramids). involved in *involuntary* muscle control
petrous part of temporal bone
pyramidal processes of temporal bone, wedged in under the base of the skull between the sphenoid and occipital bones
which nerve is most at risk in fractures of the humeral shaft and why?
radial nerve (the one nerve in direct contact with the humerus)
what kind of epithelium covers the nasal conchi?
respiratory epithelium (secretes mucus to trap large airbourne particles)
decerebate rigidity
results from a midbrain lesion and is manifested by an exaggerated extensor posture of all extremities
which arthritis is worse in the morning and which at night?
rheum worse in morning (rheum factor has collected in joints) and OA worse at night (after a days wear and tear)
common carotid artery arises from which artery?
right CC arises from brachiocephalic. left from aortic arch (2nd branch)
ciliary muscle
ring of striated smooth muscle in eye's middle layer. controls shape of lense by regulating flow of aqueous humour into Schlemm's canal
scalenous anterior insertion
scalene tubercle of first rib
which scalene muscle attaches to the 2nd rib?
scalenus posterior
what is the most common type of carpal bone fracture
scaphoid fracture
semimembranosus nerve supply
sciatic nerve
which nerve travels to the posterior aspect of the leg?
sciatic nerve
name the 3 layers which coat the wall of the eyeball
sclera, choroid, retina
humeral shaft
section of bone from upper border of pec major proximally, to supracondylar ridge distally. high facture risk
what does the femoral nerve supply below the knee?
sensory supply to anterior leg
intercondylar eminence
separation between the medial and lateral condyle on the upper extremity of the tibia
peroneus tertius insertion
shaft of 5th metatarsal
which is deeper, short or long plantar ligament?
short
coracoid process
short anterior projection from scapula which helps stabilise shoulder joint
which vein runs up the posterior leg with the sural nerve?
short saphenous vein
frozen shoulder
shoulder capsule becomes inflamed and stiff, greatly restricting motion and causing chronic pain
describe shoulder flexion and extension
shoulder flexion is swinging arm forward (shown) extension is swinging arm backward
falx cerebri
sickle shaped sheet of dura mater between two cerebral hemispheres
what is the mastoid antrum related to posteriorly?
sigmoid sinus (bone quite thin here). pic is superior view
triceps brachii
skeletal muscle having three origins that extends the forearm when it contracts
are the knee collateral ligaments tight or slack during flexion of knee?
slack
pterygomaxillary fissure
slit between the sphenoid + maxilla where the bones don't quite meet; contains a part of the palatine bone
primary palette
small anterior portion of palate formed from intermaxillary process
fovea of eye
small depression in the retina where visual acuity is highest; center of the field of vision is focused in this region. other cells are 'pushed aside' and retinal cones are concentrated
fontanelles
space between the bones of the skull in an infant/fetus, where ossification is not complete. tends to close up at about age 2
posterior cavity of eye
space in eyeball behind the lens. contains vitreous humour
cranial base
space in the skull which forms the floor of the cranial cavity
which CN gives motor innervation to sternocleidomastoid and trapezius?
spinal accessory nerve (XI)
which part of the cerebellum receives sensory info from limbs?
spinocerebellum (intermediate cerebellum)
which salivary gland secretes primarily mucus?
sublingual
Tuberomammillary nucleus
subnucleus of the posterior third of the hypothalamus. cosists largely of histaminergic neurons
peroneus brevis nerve supply
superficial peroneal nerve
peroneus longus nerve supply
superficial peroneal nerve
why should you learn head forward to stop epitaxis?
swallowing blood irritates stomach; tilting head forward decreases chance of nausea/airway obstruction
name the 4 key chewing muscles
temporalis, masseter, buccinator, pterygoid muscles
what prevents a goitre from rising above the oblique line of the thyroid cartilage?
the attachment of the thyrohyoid muscle prevents the gland expanding upwards
subcortical gray matter forms which key structures?
the basal ganglia
name the part of the occipital bone in front of the foramen magnum
the basilar part, aka Base of Occiput
which *ectodermal* embryonic tissue is able to form bone?
the cranial neural crest
which vessel passes through the jugular foramen?
the internal jugular vein
where do the corticospinal tracts cross the midline?
the junction of the brainstem with the spinal cord
which nerve emerges between the fibrous ring origin of the rectus muscles?
the optic nerve
cranium
the part of the skull which encloses the brain
which bone in the carpus 'sets' the alignment of the carpals
the scaphoid
pectoral girdle
the scapulas and clavicles
what is the fibrous tissue of the anterior fontanelle fused to below it?
the underlying dura
which muscles are supplied by musculocutaneous nerve?
the upper anterior flexor muscles of the arm (eg shoulder/elbow flexors)
why do astrocytes have neurotransmitter receptors?
they pick up NTs, causing entry of Ca2+ into astrocyte and initiating release of gliotransmitters, affecting how the synapse works
where are collateral ligaments found
they sit on either side of a joint
which bones are involved in the support and movement of the head?
thoracic & cervical vertebrae, upper ribs, clavicles, the occiput
name the single hole at the root of the neck
thoracic inlet
how does the subscapular bursa protrude from the joint cavity?
through a hole in the capsule in front
how do cranial nerves VII and VIII enter the petrous temporal bone(and hence the ear)?
through internal auditory meatus
how do nerves/vessels enter the medial thigh?
through obturator foramen
where is it safe to perform a cricothyrotomy? why would you do this?
through the skin and cricothyroid membrane to establish a patent airway during certain life-threatening situations, such as airway obstruction
name the key ligaments around the knee joint
tibial and fibular collateral ligaments, posterior + anterior cruciate ligaments, posterior oblique ligament, patella ligament, transverse ligament
what is the function of the strap muscles
to depress the hyoid bone + larynx during swallowing/speech
where does the epiglottis attach to?
to the larynx by a ligament, into the inner surface of the angle of the thyroid laminae
styloglossus
tongue muscle which . pulls your tongue upwards and backwards against hard palate when you swallow
odontoid process
toothlike process from the body of the axis vertebra. fits into atlas and acts as pivot for head rotation
name the fibrous band which unites the menisci anteriorly
transverse ligament
deltoid
triangular muscle 'the cap' on your shoulder joint. used to raise arm away from body
lateral thoracic vein
tributary of the axillary vein. It runs with the lateral thoracic artery and drains the Serratus anterior muscle and the Pectoralis major muscle
which nerves innervate the eye
trochlear, abducens, optic, occulomotor (ciliary nerves), opthalmic branch of trigeminal (lacrimal, supraorbital, supratrochlear branches)
most TCOF1 mutations have what affect on the treacle protein produced?
truncation of protein, which lacks nuclear import signal so cannot get into nucleolus to function
ophthalmic vein
two veins which drain each eye:* superior ophthalmic vein*, which follows ophthalmic artery into cavernous sinus, and *inferior ophthalmic vein* which drains half into the superior ophthalmic, and half into the pterygoid venous plexus
which nerve supplies the interossei of hand?
ulnar nerve (both dorsal and palmar)
does the brachial plexus pass over or under pec minor?
under
damage to fibres of the corticospinal tract (anywhere along its length) gives rise to what kind of syndrome?
upper motor neuron syndrome
where is the safe area for buttock intramuscular injections
upper outer quadrant of buttock
origin of psoas major
vertebral bodies T12-L5
substantia gelatinosa
vertical band of gray matter forming the dorsal part of the posterior column of spinal cord. integrates the sensory stimuli that give rise to pain and temperature
philtrum
vertical groove between the base of the nose and the upper lip
what does the word parietal mean
wall
meaning of word 'cuneate'
wedgelike
what is *complete* extension of the knee
when leg is straight
what purpose doe arteriovenous anastomoses serve?
when open, these vessels permit flow without capillaries, hence more heat transfer without a rise in local tissue metabolic rate
how do you test the hypoglossal nerve?
"stick your tongue out" - if it deviates to the side, its being pushed to the side by the strong side (ie weak side = side of lesion)
what does myelomeningocele translate to?
'spine and meninges in a sac'
where does the external iliac artery become femoral?
at the femoral point; when it passes under inguinal ligament
which extrinsic eye muscles are not supplied by oculomotor nerve? give the supply of these
lateral rectus (abducens n), superior oblique (trochlear n), the involuntary part of levator palpebrae superioris (sympathetic)
when flexing the knee from straight-legged position, what kind of rotation needs to occur to unlock it?
lateral rotation of the femoral condyles on the tibial plateau
inferior gemellus action
lateral rotation of thigh
piriformis
lateral rotator group muscle in the gluteal region
where does the internal carotid artery terminate?
lateral to optic chiasma, supero-dorsal to cavernous sinus, where it branches into anterior + middle cerebral arteries
list the 5 lymph node groups in the axilla
lateral • subscapular • pectoral • central • apical
which is more mobile, the medial or lateral meniscus? why?
lateral. the medial is attached in part to the tibial collateral ligament, so less mobile. the lateral is attached to popliteus which makes it more mobile.
gluteus maximus action
laterally rotates + extends thigh, tightens iliotibial tract
obturator internus action
laterally rotates thigh
piriformis action
laterally rotates thigh
quadratus femoris action
laterally rotates thigh
superior gemellus action
laterally rotates thigh
action of obturator externus
laterally rotates thigh.
Os coxae
latin for *hip bone* (ilium,ischium,pubis). aka *coxal bone*
the posterior fold of axilla is formed from which muscles?
latissimus dorsi and teres major muscles and tendons
which sphenoid bone wings are in the anterior cranial fossa, and which are in the posterior?
lesser wings in anterior, greater in posterior
pterygoid plexus
lies around the pterygoid muscles. has connections to cavernous sinus and facial vein. drains into maxillary vein.
pons
lies between the midbrain (above) and the medulla oblongata (below) and in front of the cerebellum
nuchal ligament
ligament extending downwards from the external occipital protuberance of the skull, attaching around the cervical spinous processes. limits forward flexion of head
costoclavicular ligament
ligament from medial cartilage of first rib, to the above costal tuberosity on the clavicle
zona orbicularis
ligament on neck of femur formed by the circular fibers of the articular capsule of the hip joint
transverse scapular ligament
ligament which crosses scapular notch
what are the most important stabilising structures of the knee - bones, ligaments or muscles?
ligaments
two most frequent things injured in the knee joint
ligaments (esp. tibial collateral) and menisci (esp. medial)
what is the shape of the vertebral column in infants?
like a letter 'C' (only primary curvature)
how does the sagittal suture run?
like a mohican; unites the two parietal bones
how does the trochlear nerve appear in real life?
like a tiny thread
parieto-occipital sulcus
line across back of brain in coronal plane. marks the boundary between the cuneus and precuneus, and also between the parietal and occipital lobes
brain lateral fissure
line across side of brain.divides both the frontal lobe and parietal lobe above from the temporal lobe below
precentral sulcus
line across top of brain in coronal plane. divides the inferior, middle, and superior frontal gyri from the precentral gyrus
central sulcus
line across top of brain in coronal plane. separates precentral from postcentral gyrus
longitudinal brain fissue
line across top of brain in sagittal plane. divides the two cerebral hemispheres in the midline
intertrochanteric line
line between the greater and lesser trochanters of femur, when they are viewed from the front
myelohyoid line
line on the inside of the mandible. It extends superior and posterior on either side from the lower part of the symphysis
adductor brevis insertion
line running from lesser trochanter to linea aspera
adductor longus insertion
linea aspera of femur
each lobe in the breast is further divided into what?
lobules
where is the axillary pulse
located inferiorly of the lateral wall of the axilla
where do the short and long intrinsics of the foot arise?
long come from the heel, short come from the midfoot
biceps femoris origin
long head = ischial tuberosity of pelvis. short head = lower linea aspera
four layers of the foot
long intrinsics, long flexors, short intrinsics, interossei + two tendons.
name the 3 heads of the triceps brachii
long, lateral and medial
erector spinae
longitudinal muscle group in the back which act *together* to flex + extend the vertebral column (iliocostalis, longissimus, spinalis)
what are the actions of the superior, inferior, lateral and medial rectus muscles?
looking up, down, side to side - also superior + inferior rectus muscles slightly rotate the eye
carotid sheath
loose areolar connective tissue that surrounds the vascular compartment of the neck; part of the deep cervical fascia of the neck
describe the sensory loss in median nerve damage
lose sensation over thumb, radial 2.5 fingers, palm of hand. lose fine movement in response to tactile stimuli
injuries to the ethmoid often cause what?
loss of CSF, subconjunctival haemorrhage, epistaxis
asynergia
loss of coordination between different muscle groups (muscles can end up opposing each other)
ataxia
loss of coordination in movement
give the 4 cardinal signs of osteoarthritis
loss of joint space (cartilage erosion), subchondral sclerosis, cyst formation (little bubbles underneath joint), formation of osteophytes
akinesia
loss or impairment of the power of voluntary movement of any kind
which can involve individual muscles, an upper or lower motoneuron lesion?
lower
peroneus brevis origin
lower 2/3 lateral fibula
where does the common carotid bifurcate?
at the level of the upper border of thyroid cartilage (easily palpable)
where does superior thyroid artery arise? where from?
at the level of the upper border of thyroid cartilage, from the just formed external carotid
where does the popliteal artery terminate?
at the lower angle of the popliteal fossa,where it divides into anterior + posterior tibial arteries
where is the axillary vein renamed the subclavian vein?
at the root of the neck
distal radioulnar joint
at the wrist. joins the head of the *ulna* to the ulnar notch on the *radius*
name the joint between an occipital condyle and the atlas vertebra?
atlanto-occipital joint
which is more superior, the atlas or the axis vertebra?
atlas ('on top of the world!')
why does the thyroid gland rise and fall during swallowing?
attached to trachea by pretracheal fascia
how does the fascia lata attach to the root of the lower limb?
attaches along the iliac crest, the inguinal ligament to pubic crest, then posteriorly around the ischial tuberosity, where it blends with the deep fascia covering the glutes.
cricotracheal ligament
attaches lower border of cricoid cartilage to the uppermost ring of the trachea
interclavicular ligament
attaches the two clavicles and upper margin of sternum
anterior gluteal line
bony line on hip bone from ASIS to top of greater sciatic notch. separates attachment of gluteus medius and minimus
posterior gluteal line
bony line on hip bone just anterior to iliac crest. gluteus medius attaches between it and the anterior gluteal line
tympanic ring
bony ring that holds the eardrum, or tympanic membrane
fracture callus
bony tissue which forms at the healing ends of a fracture
3 types of joint stabilisers
bony, static and dynamic
arithmetic ability involves which hemisphere of parietal lobe?
both
which has a labrum, acetabulum or glenoid?
both
what are the shapes of the medial and lateral menisci respectively?
both C shaped, medial more oval, and lateral circular
what is the difference between a tuberosity and a tubercle?
both are bony elevations; points of attachment for ligaments/tendons. terms can be used interchangeably but usually a tuberosity is larger/more prominant
what rough path does the nerve plexus for the upper limb take to reach the axilla?
brachial plexus travels from ventral rami in the neck, over the first rib, and into the axilla
which muscle mostly sits deep to the biceps brachii
brachialis
in anatomical position, name the superficial muscles on posterior forearm from lateral to medial (by their insertions)
brachioradialis, extensor carpii radialis longus and brevis, extensor digitorum (4th in the list + supplies 4 fingers), extensor digiti minimi, extensor carpi ulnaris
exencephaly
brain is located outside of the skull; usually found in embryos as an early stage of anencephaly. As pregnancy progresses, neural tissue gradually degenerates.
what does the cranial cavity contain?
brain, meninges, associated vessels + nerves
superior laryngeal nerve
branch of vagus. divides into internal (sensory to tongue/epiglottis) and external (tenses cricothyroid, increasing pitch)
path of nerve to subclavius
branches from brachial plexus in posterior triangle, descends anteriorly to the deep surface of subclavius
path of long thoracic nerve
branches from brachial plexus in posterior triangle, descends over medial wall of axilla supplying serratus anterior
path of dorsal scapular nerve
branches from brachial plexus in posterior triangle, passes posteriorly to levator scapulae and rhomboids
path of suprascapular nerve
branches from brachial plexus in posterior triangle, passes posteriorly to scapular notch, supplies back of scapula muscles
describe the course of the ulnar nerve to reach the wrist
branches from medial cord (C8/T1) of plexus in axilla. runs down medial arm, passing behind medial epicondyle of humerus + enters forearm between the two heads of flexor carpi ulnaris. superficially supplies this muscle + deeply supplies the ulnar (medial) part of flexor digitorum profundus. passes down ulna + emits a dorsal and a palmar cutaneous branch. enters palm through Guyon's canal going just lateral to pisiform
retinacular arteries of hip
branches of medial + lateral circumflex femoral arteries. extend to femoral head within the retinacular folds (in neck) of synovial membrane - provide head's major blood supply in adults
what are collateral nerves?
branches of nerves (where some of the fibres pass into a separate bundle)
what does STAR stand for?
branches of posterior cord: Subscapular nerve Thoracodorsal nerve Axillary nerve Radial nerve
transient ischaemic attack
brief episode of neurological dysfunction resulting from an interruption in the blood supply to the brain or the eye, sometimes as a precursor to a stroke
describe flexion of the hip joint
bringing your leg forward
thyrohyoid membrane
broad, fibro-elastic layer, between upper border of the thyroid cartilage and inner border of hyoid bone in floor of mouth
extradural hemorrhage
build-up of blood between the dura mater and skull, usually caused by tears in meningeal arteries. may also occur in the spinal column
nerve fascicle
bundle of nerve fibres surrounded by perineurium
how are the menisci attached to the tibial surface?
by fibrous tissue
cervical femur fracture
common hip fracture located at femoral neck, *within the capsule.* devascularises/causes necrosis of the head
third ventricle
central cavity of the brain, lying between the thalamus and hypothalamus of the two cerebral hemispheres
lymph vessels are absent from which bodily system?
central nervous system
behind the foramen magnum, what part of the brain does the occipital bone support?
cerebellum
mossy fibres are found where in the brain
cerebellum + hippocampus
name the grey matter covering the cerebral hemisphere?
cerebral cortex
which fluid flows through the central canal
cerebrospinal fluid
the phrenic nerve is a branch of which plexus?
cervical
name the two forward curves in the spine
cervical + lumbar lordosis
cranial sinuses
channels found between layers of dura mater in the brain which carry venous blood.
gliotransmitters
chemicals released from glial cells that facilitate neuronal communication between neurons and other glial cells and are usually induced from Ca2+ signaling
pectoralis major and minor
chest muscles which (respectively) adduct the arm / lower scapula and raise ribs
which kind of ossification forms the cranium?
chondrocranium + viscerocranium is first made as cartilage then bone (endocondral ossification). neurocranium forms as bone directly (intramembranous ossification)
which nerve crosses the middle ear cavity between the malleus and the incus?
chorda tympani; branch of facial nerve carrying sensation from the taste buds
types of hyperkinetic movements
chorea (continuous fragments of different purposful movements), athetosis (continual uncontrolled writhing, Dystonia (extreme contractions forcing unusual movements), ballismus (jumping about), tics (repeated fragments of movements)
name the vascular layer of the wall of the eye
choroid
what is the areolar
circle of dark coloured skin around the nipple (darker permanently after pregnancy)
canal of schlemm
circular canal that drains aqueous humor from the anterior chamber of the eye into the anterior ciliary veins
the entrance to the axilla (and upper limb) is bounded by what?
clavicle, first rib, upper margin of scapula
craniorachischisis is caused by failure of which closure?
closure 1 (first fold of neural tube)
name the apex of the cochlea
cochlear cupula
Triceps surae
collective name for a pair of plantar flexors on the posterior leg - the two-headed gastrocnemius and the soleus. they form most of the calf.
why is the pinna such a complex, folded shape?
collects sound waves + allows us to discriminate their direction more easily
musculocutaneous nerve
comes off lateral cord of br. plexus. supplies anterior compartment of arm
which artery bifurcates at the level of the upper border of thyroid cartilage?
common carotid
synovial joint
common, flexible joint where articulating bones are covered in slippery cartilage and a fluid-filled fibrous capsule
describe the *close packed position* of the knee
complete extension of knee, where there is medial rotation of femoral condyles on the tibial plateau. ligaments are tight so knee is 'locked' + best able to bear weight
unhappy triad
complete or partial tear of the anterior cruciate ligament, tibial collateral ligament, and medial meniscus of knee
orbicularis oris
complex of muscles around the opening of the mouth, which act to press the lips together includes some intrinsic fibres, some fibres from buccinator, and some fibres from muscles of facial expression
hydrocephalus
condition in which cerebrospinal fluid collects in the ventricles of the brain (due to blocked aqueduct etc). in infants it can cause rapid head growth/brain damage
winged scapula
condition where scapula protrudes from a person's back in an abnormal position, can be due to serratus anterior paralysis
what are the articular surfaces of the knee joint?
condyles of femur and flat upper surfaces of tibial condyles
spina bifida
congenital defect of the spine in which part of the spinal cord+ meninges are exposed through a gap in the backbone. causes paralysis below lesion/ mental handicap
what is CDH?
congenital dislocation/dysplasia of the hip. femoral head and acetabulum developed unstable with each other. more common in girls
modiolus
conical shaped central axis of bone in the cochlea. contains cochlear nerve
gustatory
conncerned with tasting or the sense of taste
cricoarytenoid muscles
connect the cricoid cartilage and arytenoid cartilage. posterior cricoarytenoid muscle *abducts* vocal cords to open the rima glottidis, lateral *adducts* vocal cords to close it
surgical neck of humerous
constriction below the greater and lesser tubercles. much more often fractured than the anatomical neck
Tom, Dick And Very Nervous Harry
contents of tarsal tunnel from anterior to posterior: *t*ibialis posterior tendon flexor *d*igitorum longus tendon posterior tibial *a*rtery and *v*ein tibial *n*erve flexor *h*allucis longus tendon
petroclinoid ligament
continuation of tentorium cerebelli (dura mater), anterior to its attachments up the petrous crest. joins the apex of petrous temporal bone to posterior clinoid process.
which ligament, over time, could cause severe damage to the supraspinatus tendon? why?
coracoacromial ligament, because it lies above the tendon + is very strong so rarely damaged (but likely to erode/inflame the tendon)
which primary structures are responsible for bending incoming light inside the eye
cornea and lens
striatum
corpus striatum: striped mass of white grey matter located in front of the thalamus in each cerebral hemisphere; consists of the caudate nucleus and putamen
UMN lesions always involve which tract?
corticospinal tract
which is the most important of the descending motor tracts
corticospinal tract
which is the more medial, the conoid tubercle or the costal tuberosity?
costal tuberosity
how can you have weakness without having low muscle strength?
could have strong muscles but unable to use them to make strong movements
what is the mesenchyme in pharyngeal arches formed from?
cranial neural crest (outer layer) and rostral paraxial mesoderm (inner layer). they migrate into the arches
name a skull with the mandible taken away
cranium
how do high and low frequencies of soundwaves affect the cochlea?
create waves in the basilar membrane, which vibrate against the tectorial membrane, aggregating hair cells
hiatus semilunaris
crescent-shaped groove in medial meatus of nasal cavity, inferior to ethmoidal bulla. location of openings for the frontal sinus, maxillary sinus, anterior ethmoidal sinus
which is more pronounced, the intertrochanteric line, or intertrochanteric crest?
crest
name the intracranial surface of the ethmoid bone
cribriform plate
which is the only cartilage in the body which is fully complete as a ring?
cricoid cartilage
name the circular base of the larynx
cricoid ring
which part of pharynx ISNT supplied by pharyngeal plexus?
cricopharyngeus (lowest part of inferior constrictor). supplied by external laryngeal nerve
name the midline anterior superficial part of the conus elasticus
cricothyroid ligament
anterior attachment of falx cerebri
crista galli
decussate
cross or intersect each other to form an X
how is the path of the external auditory meatus 'S-shaped'?
curves anteriorly, then posteriorly, then anteroinferiorly to reach tympanic membrane
do lymph nodes increase or decrease with age?
decrease (unless enlarged by inflammation/tumour growth)
from the 1st to the 6th pharyngeal arch, does the contribution of neural crest cells increase or decrease?
decrease. you'll find many less neural crest cells in arch no. 6
is movement amplified or decreased between the tympanic membrane and the oval window?
decreased to lesser movements by transfer of energy through the ossicles
are neural crest cells increased or decreased by TCOF1 mutation?
decreased; especially affects pharyngeal arches 1&2
does the carotid tree pass superficial or deep to the mandible?
deep
profunda femoris
deep branch of femoral artery (arises inferomedial to the acetabulum) which supplies the deep structures of the thigh
which 2 foramina pass out of the middle cranial fossa through the greater wings of sphenoid bone?
foramen ovale and foramen spinosum
3 effects of cerebellar hemisphere lesions
dysdiadochokinesia (no fast alternating movements), speech problems, intention tremor (unable to produce smooth movement with cerebrum alone)
how is the cerebellum of dyslexics affected?
dyslexics have poor motor coordination; and fMRI shows less cerebellar activity when learning a task
list the foramina seen in the cranial base from ant to post
foramen ovale, foramen spinosum, carotid canal, stylomastoid foramen, jugular foramen, hypoglossal canals (shown here as arrows), foramen magnum
which foramina can be found just lateral to the roots of the anterior clinoid processes
foramen rotundum and superior orbital fissure
when and how does the head of the femur develop?
forms during first year of postnatal life, developing from 2ndary ossification centre. fuses with shaft of femur age 16-18
axillary vein
forms from brachial and basilic veins - heads towards 1st rib where it becomes subclavian vein
pharyngobasilar fascia
fibrous coat of the pharyngeal wall, attached above to basilar occipital + petrous temporal bones. major part of pharyngeal wall where muscle is deficient (above the level of the superior constrictor)
what type of joints are formed by the inter-vertebral discs and the vertebrae?
fibrous joints
axillary sheath
fibrous sheath that encloses first portion of axillary artery, together with brachial plexus. an extension of the deep cervical fascia
meniscofemoral ligaments
fibrous strands passing from the back of the lateral meniscus to the posterior cruciate ligament + femoral condyle, found in some knees.
anterior fontanelle
fibrous tissue between the bregma bones before they fuse. seen in infants
which ligament splits the biceps femoris tendon
fibular collateral ligament
perineal nerve is AKA
fibular nerve
how would you find the carotid canal entrance in the cranial base?
find the styloid processes of temporal bone. carotid canal is neat, round opening just medial to them
on the dorsal side of the hand what part is supplied by median nerve?
fingertips (except little finger)
are lymph nodes soft or firm?
firm
which cervical vertebrae are involved in motor supply of neck muscles/cutaneous sensation of the neck?
first 4. (rest are in brachial plexus so go towards upper limb)
what is the root origin of the long thoracic nerve?
first key branch of brachial plexus, C5,C6,C7
by what age should the neural tube be sealed and completed?
first month of development
give the muscles involved in flexion of an extended knee, and the order of their use
first popliteus (to unlock the knee) followed by flexion using biceps femoris, semitendinosus + semimembranosus
lower motor neuron lesion symptoms
flaccid paralysis, rapid muscle wasting, fibrillation and fasciculation
epiglottis
flap of cartilage at the root of the tongue, which is depressed during swallowing to cover windpipe
sustentaculum tali
flat shelf of bone on medial + upper calcaneus, which talus sits on. Tom Dick + Harry tendons wrap under here and lift arch of foot like a 'wheelbarrow'
tibial collateral ligament
flat triangular sheet of fibrous tissue, fanning out from adductor tubercle (femur), across the medial meniscus, onto the tibia
tibial plateau
flat upper end of the tibia capped with articular cartilage, articulating with the femur
pectineus
flat, quadrangular muscle in medial thigh. most anterior adductor of hip
action of psoas major
flex + medially rotate thigh
if there were no muscles supporting it, would the head flop forwards or backwards?
flex forwards onto the chest
what is the major function of the posterior thigh muscles?
flex the knee
biceps femoris action
flexes knee + extends hip. lateral rotation of leg
semimembranosus action
flexes knee, extends hip. can medially rotate flexed knee
flexor digitorum longus action
flexes phalanges toes 2-5, helps mantain longitudenal arches of foot
action of iliacus
flexes thigh
sartorius action
flexes thigh + leg. laterally rotates thigh
rectus femoris action
flexes thigh, extends leg
movements enabled by coracobrachialis
flexion and adduction of arm
which arm movements are supported by coracobrachialis
flexion and adduction of arm
what does the ulnar nerve supply aside from hand muscles?
flexor carpi ulnaris and medial half of flexor digitorum profundus
which muscles in the forearm are supplied by ulnar nerve
flexor carpi ulnaris and the medial half of flexor digitorum profundus
if you lose function of flexor digitorum superficialis, which muscle can also flex the PIP?
flexor digitorum profundus
which types of skull movements occur at the atlanto-occipital joints?
forward flexion & extension (nodding), lateral flexion & extension (head side tilt)
where does spinocerebellun project to?
forwards to red nucleus and up to ventral lateral thalamus
diploic veins
found in diploe of skull vault bones. drain this area into the dural venous sinuses
stylomastoid foramen
found on base of skull between styloid&mastoid temporal bone processes. termination of the facial canal, and transmits the facial nerve and stylomastoid artery
scalenus
four pairs of muscles extending from transverse processes of the cervical vertebrae to rib 2; involved in moving neck and breathing
which finger flexor muscle makes a 'girly fist' ? why?
flexor digitorum superficialis, because it doesnt reach the DIP joints so can't flex the tips of the fingers (that is doe by FDprofundus)
which structure forms the roof of the carpal tunnel?
flexor retinaculum
name the part of the cerebellum important for balance
floccular-nodular node
which lobe of cerebellum projects directly to vestibular nuclei?
flocculo-nodular lobe
vestibulocerebellum is formed from which parts of the cerebellum?
flocculonodular lobe and vermis
which is longer, the floor or the roof of the external auditory meatus?
floor
where is the thyroid formed?
floor of pharynx, just behind developing tongue - migrates down the neck later on
obturator externus insertion
floor of trochanteric fossa (femur)
how does blood from the superficial veins get back to the heart?
flows from superficial to deep veins, gets pumped by muscular contraction, and passes to the heart
bursa
fluid filled sac/cavity (like a deflated balloon) countering friction at a joint, eg subacromial bursa
bursae
fluid-filled sac or saclike cavity, especially one countering friction at a joint
colles fracture
fracture of distal end of the radius, causing dorsal translation of the carpus. wrist joint looks like a dinner fork. cause: FOOSH
treatment for craniosynostosis
frequent surgery from birth til adolescence to open up the sutures
info from the brain goes to the cerebellum from where?
from cerebral cortex via pontine nucleus, and from inferior olive
the main vessels of the leg pass through the adductor hiatus in which direction
from front of thigh to the back
adductor longus origin
from pubis immediately below pubic crest
in anatomy, what region is defined as the leg?
from the ankle to the knee
where does the vocal ligament attach?
from the anterior (vocal) process of the arytenoid cartilage, forwards to the midline of the two thryoid lamenae
obturator artery arises where?
from the internal iliac artery on the inner pelvic wall
with hand laid atop of forearm, label each of the superior anteior forearm muscles indicates by the digits
from thumb to pinky: pronator teres, flexor carpi radialis, palmaris longus, flexor carpi ulnaris, flexor digitorum superficialis
precentral gyrus is part of which lobe of brain
frontal
sphenoid bone supports parts of which lobes of the brain?
frontal and temporal lobes
coronal suture joins which bones
frontal and two parietals
what is the most common reason for swelling around a joint?
ganglion - 'balloon' of synovial fluid
synovial cyst aka
ganglion, ganglion cyst, or synovial hernia
name the plantar flexors of the ankle
gastrocnemius, soleus, plantaris (posterior leg)
name the 3 key *extrinsic* muscles of tongue we need to know?
genioglossus, hyoglossus, styloglossus
contents of jugular foramen
glossopharyngeal n, vagus n, spinal accessory n (descending), internal jugular vein, inferior petrosal sinus, sigmoid sinus, meningeal branches of the ascending pharyngeal + occipital arteries
gluteus maximus insertion
gluteal ridge of femur, iliotibial tract, fascia lata
which parts of the lower limb are innervated by the lumbarsacral plexus?
glutes, posterior thigh, leg, and foot
which muscles insert into the iliotibial tract?
gluteus maximus and the tensor fasciae latae
name the muscles in superficial group of gluteal region
gluteus maximus, gluteus medius, gluteus minimus, and tensor fasciae latae
name the 4 muscles inserted into the tibia
gracilis, sartorius, semimembranosis, semitendinosis
what are the most numeral cells in the brain?
granule cells
is the greater or lesser tubercle more lateral the humerus?
greater
which is more anterior, the lesser of greater wing of the sphenoid?
greater
name the two bony prominances just distal to the anatomical neck of the humerus?
greater and lesser tubercles
which of the greater/lesser tubercles on the humerus is posterior and which anterior?
greater is posterior, lesser is anterior
how do you tell which trochanter is which?
greater trochanter is more lateral + superior
gluteus minimus insertion
greater trochanter of femur at front, close to hip joint capsule
inferior gemellus insertion
greater trochanter with obturator internus + superior lamellae
pennate muscle
has fascicles that attach obliquely to its tendon; generally allows greater and longer force production but smaller range of motion
what is special about the body of the atlas vertebra?
has large vertebral foramen and an arch instead of a body. its upper processes cup the occipital condyles.
adductor magnus insertion
has two insertions: one along linea aspera and medial suprachondylar ridge, the other adductor tubercle of femur (gap in between insertions = adductor hiatus)
the medial ventral posterior nucleus in the thalamus deals with somatosensory info from where in the body?
head/face/tongue
calcaneus
heel bone. joins with foot, ankle and va tendo calcaneus
inversion of foot
heel of foot turned to face inward
eversion of foot
heel of foot turned to face outward
name 5 parts of the auricle
helix, antihelix, concha, lobule, tragus
what is the motor function of the cerebellar hemispheres
help coordinate the planning of limb movements (project in paricular to PMcortex)
how do the menisci add to conformity of the knee joint?
help form a 'socket' for the convex femur to fit into the bones of the lower leg
trapezoid ligament
helps attach clavicle to scapula; extends from the upper coracoid process to trapezoid line
adductor hiatus
hiatus between the adductor magnus muscle and the femur just above knee. allows femoral vessels to pass from the anterior thigh to the back of the knee
knee joint is what kind of synovial joint?
hinge
which is more stable, hip or shoulder joint? how is this achieved?
hip, by having a much deeper ball and socket joint including a labrum, and more reliance on ligaments than muscle
where aside from skull vault bones is diploe found?
hips, sternum
what is a hot potato voice
hoarse breathy sounding like you have a hot potato in your mouth
foramen magnum
hole in base of occipital bone through which spinal cord/structures passes
where is the foramen lacerum
hole in the base of skull between sphenoid, apex of petrous temporal and basilar part of occipital
foramen rotundum
hole in the sphenoid bone just lateral to the anterior clinoid processes. connects the middle cranial fossa and the pterygopalatine fossa
infraspinatous fossa
hollow area below spine of scapula (hence 'infraspinatous')
epitympanic recess
hollow located on the superior/roof aspect of the middle ear
what are the upper, middle and lower facets of the patella?
horizontal regions of the deep surface of patella's articular cartilage. flexed knee = upper facet contacts femur. as knee extends, middle + lower facets come into contact
name the 3 joints within the *single* synovial cavity of the elbow
humero-ulnar, radio-capitellar, proximal radio-ulnar (all share same synovial cavity)
supracondylar humerus fracture
humerus fracture just above epicondyles, very common in children. brachial artery and median nerve at risk
how does the knee lock?
in hyperextension, the femur rotates medially tighening ligaments
where is the pituitary gland located
in midline behind bridge of the nose and below the base of the brain, protruding from the bottom of the hypothalamus
where are the cords of the brachial plexus located?
in the axilla, arranged around the axillary artery
despite the knee being a hinge joint, in what position is some rotation between the femur and tibia most possible?
in the flexed position of the knee
apraxia
inability to perform particular purposive actions; eg cannot move lips or tongue to the right place to say sounds correctly because, even though the muscles are not weak, the message from the brain to the mouth are disrupted
lower motoneuron
includes alpha motoneurons (those leaving the spinal cord)
incomplete fusion of what causes cleft chin?
incomplete fusion of the left and right mandibular prominences.
compartment syndrome
increased pressure within one of the body's compartments (usually limbs), leading to insufficient blood supply hence nerve + muscle damage
deltopectoral groove
indent between deltoid and peck major. cephalic vein passes through it.
pulp space infection
infection within the pulp-space of the fingers. little room for swelling/escape so severe pain/swelling/pressure
the flat articular surface of the atlas: inferior or superior surface?
inferior
how do the thyroid cartilage and cricoid cartilage articulate?
inferior cornu of each thyroid lamina articulates with facet on side of cricoid at *synovial joint*
gluteus maximus nerve supply
inferior gluteal nerve (lumbosacral plexus)
where are the climbing fibres found in the cerebellum originate?
inferior olivary nucleus
tennis elbow
inflammation due to tearing of a few fibres at the origin of the common extensor tendon (epicondylitis) caused by overuse of the muscles of the forearm
bursitis
inflammation of a bursa, typically one in the knee, elbow or shoulder, caused by infection, pressure, trauma etc
swan neck deformity
inflammation/injury damages the *extensor digitorum tendon* (mallet finger) and also to the *volar plate* (hyper-extends the PIP joint)
how does dopamine affect the basal ganglia indirect pathway?
inhibits it (hence increases movement)
where does serratus anterior muscle insert?
inserts into the medial margin of scapula
proximal radioulnar joint
inside elbow. joins the head of the *radius* to the radial notch on the *ulna* (with help from annular + quadrate ligament)
what is the mantra for examining hollow viscera?
inspect, palpate, percuss, auscultate
what is a key difference between tremor in basal ganglia disease and cerebellar disease
intention tremor in cerebellar disease, resting tremor in basal ganglia disease
where do the anterior and posterior cruciate ligaments and the menisci all attach to?
intercondylar eminence
fundus of eye
interior surface of the eye opposite the lens and includes the retina, optic disc, macula, fovea, and posterior pole
the bridge of the nose and the philtrum form from which structure?
intermaxillary process
which carotid artery enters the carotid canal in the temporal bone, internal or external?u
internal
which has no branches in the neck, the internal or external carotid artery?
internal
name the foramina in the posterior cranial fossa
internal acoustic meatus, hypoglossal canal, foramen magnum, jugular foramen
which artery is pulsing just behind the top lateral aspect of pharynx?
internal carotid
the chains of lymph nodes in the neck lie along which vessel?
internal jugualar vein
many lymph nodes surround which major vessel in the neck?
internal jugular vein
which structure divides the thalamus into anterior, medial and lateral principal nuclear masses?
internal medullary lamina
describe the venous plexi of the spine
internal plexus drains from vertebral bodies/spinal cord into external plexus, which drains to segmental veins of body wall
the pars reticulata of substantia nigra has a similar function to which part of globus pallidus?
internal segment of globus pallidus
what do the internal and external carotid arteries supply?
internal: much of the brain. external: neck, face, head and scalp
which is more deep in the hand, the lumbrical muscles or interossei?
interossei
tibialis posterior origin
interosseous membrane + posterior head/upper 2/3 fibula + latero-medial tibia
what are the ventromedial spinal cord pathways
interstitiospinal, tectospinal, vestibulospinal, reticulospinal tracts
which bony structure runs between the greater and lesser trochanters of femur *anteriorly*?
intertrochanteric *line*
which bony structure runs between the greater and lesser trochanters of femur *posteriorly*?
intertrochanteric crest
vastus lateralis origin
intertrochanteric line, linea aspera + lateral supracondylar line
name the septum between the lateral and 3rd ventricles
interventricular foramen
pairs of spinal nerves leave vertebral column through which foramina?
intervertebral foramina
how are the medial muscles of the thigh divided up?
into 3 strata; deepest stratum = adductor magnus, gracilis, obturator externus. middle stratum = adductor brevis only. superficial stratum = pectineus, adductor longus
within the posterior thigh, how does the sciatic nerve divide?
into common peroneal and tibial nerve
insertion of iliacus
into tendon of psoas, and then to lesser trochanter
where and how do pec major muscle fibres have their insertation?
into the crest of the greater tubercle of humerus (the lower fibres twist up to insert behind)
where does the teres major insert?
into the crest of the lesser tubercle
where does the deltoid insert?
into the deltoid tuberosity of the humerus
some facial muscles have no bony attachment. where do they insert?
into the skin
in which fracture would you worry about the blood supply to the femoral head, extracapsular or intracapsular? what would you do?
intracapsular. If fracture is within capsule, replace the femoral head with an artificial one
which fascia encloses both the anterior and posterior compartments of neck?
investing (deep) cervical fascia
name the fascia which surrounds all the muscles of the leg
investing deep fascia
what buffers the pH of the mouth after sweet/acidic food?
ions in *saliva*
are cerebellar hemisphere lesion effects contra or ipsilateral?
ipsilateral (pathway involves a *double cross*)
does the cerebellum have contralateral or ipsilateral control? why?
ipsilateral. its motor outputs cross twice - once in the midbrain to the contralateral red nucleus, and once immediately as the rubrospinal tract leaves the red nucleus
fourth ventricle
irregular ventricle between the third ventricle and the central canal
describe the undersurface of a sphenoid bone
irregular; extends down to the level of the sides of soft palate in two plates called the *medial* and *lateral pterygoid plates*
quadratus femoris origin
ischial tuberosity
semimembranosus origin
ischial tuberosity
semitendinosus origin
ischial tuberosity
where do the flexor muscles of the knee arise?
ischial tuberosity
inferior gemellus origin
ischial tuberosity (lower margin of lesser sciatic notch)
adductor magnus origin
ischial tuberosity + inferior pubic ramus
why doesn't flexor carpi ulnaris go through the carpal tunnel?
it attaches to the pisiform
following rupture of the urethra in the perineum, why doesn't urine spread down into the thigh? where does it go?
it can't; it is held within a peculiar layer of *membranous fascia* which attaches over the fascia lata. instead, it fills upwards over anterior abdo wall: a kangaroo pouch.
how might an infection get into thenar/mid-palmar space?
it has to travel quite deeply, so by a penetrating wound, or a neglected tendon sheath infection which has spread
the popliteal artery arises from which artery?
it is a continuation of the femoral artery
why is the pisiform not always counted as a real wrist bone?
it is associated with the flexor tendon, and is not involved in movement of the wrist
why can the head of radius rotate around its own axis without moving the ulna?
it is essentially just a cup and ball joint in a ligament circular sling. enables pronation/supination
why can't cartilage heal itself?
its avascular
Temporomandibular joint
joint between the condyle of the mandible and the temporal underside surface of the zygomatic arch
which is most posterior, the jugular foramen or the carotid canal?
jugular foramen
all of the head lymph nodes drain into which 'daddy' node in the
jugulodigastric node
does the brachiocephalic artery divide above or below the thoracic inlet?
just below
where is the brachial pulse?
just medial to the biceps tendon in crevass of a bent arm
is there one or two lambdoid sutures in the skull?
just one, running across the posterior occipital bone (not one on each side)
anterior interosseous nerve
largest branch of median nerve. supplies the deep muscles on the front of the forearm, except the ulnar half of the flexor digitorum profundus
thyroid cartilage
largest cartilage of the larynx, a projection of which forms the Adam's apple in humans
inferior olivary nuclei
largest nucleus situated in the olivary body (part of medulla oblongata). involved in motor control + supplying inputs to cerebellum
is the fibula lateral or medial to the tibia?
lateral
when passing through the adductor hiatus, does the popliteal vein lie medial or lateral to the artery?
lateral
which cord does the musculocutaneous nerve come from?
lateral
peroneus longus insertion
lateral aspect of medial cuneiform + base of 1st metacarpal
where do the medial and lateral cutaneous nerves of the forearm arise?
lateral branches from musculocutaneous nerve, medial arises directly from medial cord of brachial plexus (so in the axilla)
describe the terminal branches of the lateral and medial cords of brachial plexus, in order of branching
lateral pectoral nerve, medial pectoral nerve, musculocutaneous and two medial cutaneous(of arm and forearm). median and ulnar
viscerocranium
lower portion of skull; the bones + cartilages of face and neck, includes maxilla, mandible, ossicles of inner ear
where does the superior constrictor attach?
lower posterior margin of *medial pterygoid plate*, alveolar process of mandible, pterygomandibular raphe, and a few fibres from side of the tongue
if you have to make incisions in the tympanic membrane, where is safest to do so?
lower posterior quadrant
where does the latissimus dorsi arise?
lower thoracic and lumbar spinous processes, their interspinous ligaments, the thoracolumbar fascia, and iliac crest
common clinical conditions of the hand?
lumps + bumps, nerve compression syndromes, finger deformities, common fractures
which vessels drain lymph from the tissues?
lymph capillaries and the venous ends of blood capillaries
which is deeper, adductor magnus or adductor longus?
magnus
how does CSF escape from the 4th ventricle
mainly through the median aperture (some through the two lateral apertures as well)
superficial temporal artery
major artery of the head. arises from external carotid. Its pulse is palpable superior to the zygomatic arch
what affect does BDNF have on pain neurons?
makes the hyper excitable by changing Cl- concentration; makes GABA act to excite not inhibit neuron
is cleft lip more common in males or females?
males
which muscles are supplied by the ulnar nerve?
many of the lower anterior flexor muscles of the medial side of arm (including the fingers but not the thumb)
why when you get mumps do you look 'like a hamster'?
massive swelling of parotid gland
what does the middle ear communicate with posteriorly?
mastoid antrum
what is the only air sinus to be well developed at birth
mastoid antrum
a line between which two structures shows the course of the internal jugular vein in the neck?
mastoid process and sternoclavicular joint
which sinus lies below the floor of the orbit + behind the cheek?
maxillary
name cranial nerve V2
maxillary nerve
what drains into inferior concha?
maxillary sinus
name the two terminal branches of external carotid artery
maxillary, superficial temporal
uvula
means 'little grape.' small pendant fleshy lobe at the back of the soft palate made from longitudinal muscle/connective tissue. initiates gag reflex + can swell eg in tonsilitis, allergic reactions
what is a nerve plexus?
means of connecting more than one spinal nerve root to a peripheral nerve
which cartilage helps form the malleus and incus of ear?
meckels cartilage (of the jaw)
is the apex of the axilla lateral or medial to the coracoid process?
medial
which side of knee is more commonly injured, lateral or medial?
medial
is the ulna medial or lateral to the radius when the hand is in anatomical position?
medial (remember palms face forward)
name the ligaments around the knee joint
medial + lat collateral ligaments (outside capsule of joint) and posterior + ant cruciform ligaments (within capsule)
which cords of brachial plexus supply the flexor muscles of the upper limb?
medial and lateral cords
name the two main parts of the condyle of the humerus
medial and lateral epicondyle
what are the 3 major sagittal divisions of cerebellum
medial cerebellum (vermis), intermediate cerebellum (pars intermedia), lateral cerebellum (hemispheres)
medial border of femoral triangle
medial edge of adductor longus
laterl border of femoral triangle
medial edge of sartorius
what is the common origin of the superficial flexor muscles of forearm?
medial epicondyle
which nuclei of thalamus is involved in auditory pathway of thalamus? what role does it play?
medial geniculate nucleus. receives info from inferior colliculus (midbrain) + passes to primary auditory cortex
which nerve supplies sternocostal head of pec major?
medial pectoral nerve
which 3 main chewing muscles enable you to bite?
medial pterygoid, temporalis, masseter
which nerve provides sensory innervation to the lateral palmar hand
median
which two major nerves run all the way down to the elbow without supplying anything?
median and ulnar
bregma
meeting point of the sagittal and coronal sutures (front of skull)
tympanic membrane
membrane in the ear which vibrates in response to soundwaves; the eardrum
what is the conus elasticus
membrane of lower larynx; arises from circular cricoid cartilage base and ends at a free border, forming the lower edge of the slit in the inner wall of the larynx
which lymph nodes drain the teeth/anterior end of tongue
mental nodes
are dopaminergic receptors ionotropic or metabotropic
metabotropic
intramedullary nail
metal rod forced into the medullary cavity of a bone to treat fractures
where can you reliably find the femoral arterial pulse?
mid-inguinal point
pretectal nucleus
midbrain structure important for the eyes; location of synapse for pupillary light reflex
extensor digitorum longus insertion
middle + distal phalanges of lateral 4 toes
which artery is transmitted into the skull by the foramen spinosum? what is its main function?
middle meningeal artery. travels in groove along cranial base/inner side wall of vault to *supply nutrients to bones of cranial vault*
extensor hallucis longus origin
middle of anterior fibula
which end of the humerus would have to be fractured for you to do a posterior surgical approach? why?
middle to distal third. it gives a reliable way of finding (hence protecting) the radial nerve; between medial and lateral head of triceps
a laterally herniated disk at the level between the penultimate and ultimate cervical vertebrae would affect which trunk of the brachial plexus?
middle trunk (C7). If it was *below* the 7th C vertebra, it would've been inferior trunk (C8)
crista galli
midline ridge of bone that projects from the cribriform plate of the ethmoid bone. It is where the falx cerebri attaches anteriorly to the skull. The olfactory bulbs lie on either side
perpendicular plate ethmoid bone
midline septum of the ethmoid bone, continuous with the midline cartilage of nose
name the central bony axis the cochlea is wound around
modiolus
are there more glia or neurons in the human body? how about rats?
more glia in humans, not rats though - indicates glia are involved in greater computational power
which nerves are most at risk in shoulder instability?
most at risk is axillary nerve (also medial and radial)
Holoprosencephaly
most common craniofacial defect in human *pregnancies* - often fatal before birth. forebrain (prosencephalon) fails to properly split into left + right. caused by SHH mutations
why is the superficial dorsal horn important?
most pain fibres end there (C fibres) - particularly in lamina II
where can ganglion cysts form?
mostly wrists and feet - but can occur wherever there is synovial fluid
which nerves supply the strap muscles of the neck?
motor nerves from the cervical plexus
which nerve mainly motor supplies muscles of chewing?
motor supply from mandibular division of trigeminal nerve
rubrospinal tract
motor tract from red nucleus of midbrain to cervical spine. decussates in midbrain. functions mostly in upper limb flexion, but if corticospinal tract is lesioned, it can assume many corticospinal functions.
thumb opposition
moving the thumb round to be opposite the fingers (combination of flexion, medial rotation, adduction)
radial nerve provides sensory innervation to what?
much of the posterior arm and forearm as well as the dorsal thumb, index, and middle fingers up to the level of the fingernails
give 4most common syndromes with craniosynostosis. what causes them?
muenke, apert, crouzon, pfeiffer. Mutations in our 4 Fibroblast Growth Factors (FGF) receptors
orbicularis oculi
muscle in the face that closes the eyelids. has an orbital and a palpebral part
risorius
muscle of facial expression arises in fascia over parotid gland; passes superficial to the platysma to inserts onto the skin at angle of mouth
occipitofrontalis
muscle of facial expression which covers parts of the skull. It consists of two bellies connected by aponeurosis: The occipital belly, near the occipital bone, + frontal belly, near frontal bone
brachioradialis
muscle of the forearm that aids flexion at the elbow/supination/pronation
extensor digitorum
muscle of the posterior forearm extends medial 4 digits of hand
tensor fasciae latae
muscle of the thigh arising just behind ASIS + inserting to anterior iliotibial tract. keeps balance of pelvis while standing/moving
hyoglossus
muscle of tongue. arises from sides of the hyoid, passing up to insert into the tongue. It pulls the tongue down into the mouth
genioglossus
muscle which forms the bulk of the tongue - allows you to stick out tongue. arises from genial spines inside the mandible near the midline + attaches to hyoid bone and underside of tongue
prevertebral muscles
muscles located between the prevertebral fascia and the vertebral column. flex the neck.
what have pharyngeal arches got to do with the innervation of the head?
muscles that develop in each pharyngeal arch are innervated by a specific cranial nerve. These nerves continue to innervate the same muscles and they move to their final locations
which nerve travels through the coracobrachialis muscle?
musculocutaneous
why does the atlas have an unusually large vetebral foramen?
must enclose the spinal cord *and* the odontoid process of the axis
gain-of-function mutation
mutation that confers new or enhanced activity on a protein (eg in FGFR mutations causing craniosynostosis and achondroplasia)
sartorius
narrow muscle runs obliquely across anterior thigh from ASIS to medial leg below the knee
nasal conchae
narrow, curled bone shelves (usually 3) protruding from lateral wall into nasal cavity, dividing it into meatuses + filtering/heating/humidifying air
corrugator supercilii
narrow, pyramidal muscle located at the medial end of the eyebrow, beneath frontalis and just above orbicularis oculi
name the 3 main regions of the pharynx
nasopharynx, oropharynx, laryngopharynx
tibialis posterior insertion
navicular tuberosity, medial cruneiform + slips to other tarsal bones. 2nd 3rd + 4th metatarsals
cephalic
near the head
which particular basal ganglia part degenerates in huntingtons?
neostriatum
what word is used instead of 'tract' in the PNS?
nerve
excitotoxicity
nerve cell death caused by excessive stimulation of NMDA glutamate receptors. allow high levels of Ca2+ in enter cells, activating enzymes + causing damage
nerve supply superior gemellus
nerve to obturator internus
nerve supply obturator internus
nerve to obturator internus (L5,S1,S2)
inferior gemellus nerve supply
nerve to quadratus femoris
quadratus femoris nerve supply
nerve to quadratus femoris (from sacral plexus)
does the PNS come from the neural tube or neural crest?
neural crest
what is the main source of mesenchyme cells in the frontonasal prominence?
neural crest
the neural tube develops from which epithlium?
neural plate epithelium
which kind of defects cause the most stillbirths?
neural tube defects (esp. anencephaly)
together, the bones of the cranial vault form which structure
neurocranium
name the 3 parts of the cranium
neurocranium, viscerocranium, chondrocranium
which ACh receptors are excitatory?
nicotinic receptors and muscarinic receptors 1,3 and 5
can you easily palpate the AIIS?
no
does carotid body detect changes in blood pressure?
no - carotid sinus does
key differences in a fetal skull to adult?
no mastoid process. frontal bone divided by metopic suture. fontanelles between vault bones. mandible unfused at symphysis. only a ring of bone around the outer margin of middle ear cavity (tympanic ring) - no tube of bone
are the ligaments within the joint capsule in the hip joint?
no the ligaments surround the capsule
are glial cells able to conduct APs?
no they are not electrically excitable
does the femoral vein pass through the saphenous opening?
no, but the great saphenous vein passes through the opening to reach the underlying femoral vein
do individual nerve fibres fuse anywhere in the body?
no. however, multiple fibres often enter a single sheath/bundle
are all the cranial nerves mixed sensory/motor nerves (like most of the spine)?
no. some are special sensory nerves, some entirely motor, some mixed.
will the cranial vault develop in anencephaly?
no. vault bones grow around the brain to fit its size perfectly - if there is no brain, there will be no cranium
what important bony landmarks exist on the shaft of femur?
non on the front. linea aspera on the back, with spiral line and gluteal tuberosity above it, and supracondylar lines below
shenton's line
normally continuous line from medial edge of femoral neck, below femoral head, to inferior edge of the superior pubic ramus; used to determine the relationship between the head of the femur and the acetabulum
what is the function of the maxillary sinus?
not fully known - they are more vascular than the brain though; likely to do with warming air/controlling temperature
acetabular notch
notch in inferior margin of acetabulum, converted to a foramen by transverse acetabular ligament. gives passage to the acetabular branches of the obturator artery and vein
scapular notch
notch in the superior border of the scapula, just medial to the base of the coracoid process. allows passage of a neurovascular bundle to posterior muscles.
where in the brain is AMPA found?
nowhere - AMPAR receptors are found, but they detect glutamate. AMPA is not present naturally
where is biceps brachii attached to the humerus?
nowhere - it goes from the scapula to radial tuberosity
ligamentum nuchae
nuchal ligament: thick sheet of 'midline' fascia in the posterior cervical spine, provides the proximal attachment for the rhomboids and trapezius
give 5 indications supporting doing surgery on a patient with a fracture (as opposed to leaving it)
open wound, vascular injury, nerve injury (sometimes!), polytrauma, non-uniting bone fragments
which muscle arises from the hook of the hamate and inserts on the ulnar side of the 5th metacarpal
opponens digiti minimi
name the muscles of the hypothenar eminance from lateral to medial
opponens digiti minimi, flexor digiti minimi, abductor digiti minimi
the three true thenar muscles are
opponens pollicis, abductor pollicis brevis, flexor pollicis brevis
name the 4 thenar muscles
opponens pollicis, abductor pollicis brevis, flexor pollicis brevis, adductor pollicis
which small hand muscles AREN'T supplied by the ulnar nerve?
opponens pollicis, abductor pollicis brevis, flexor pollicis brevis, two radial lumbricals
name cranial nerve V1
opthalmic nerve
which foramina are found anterior to the roots of the anterior clinoid processes
optic foramina
which neurovascular structures pass within the common tendinous ring?
optic nerve, opthalmic artery, oculomotor nerve (superior and inferior divisions), abducens nerve, nasociliary nerve (branch of V1)
describe cranial nerve II
optic nerve; for vision. passes from back of eye, through optic canal, then splits; lateral fibres of retina run to the visual cortex, medial retina fibres to the optic chiasma
which muscles come out of the modiolus of the face
orbicularis oris, levator anguli oris, zygomaticus major, buccinator, depressor anguli oris
how can you tell the origin of muscles from their insertion?
origin is the attachment site that doesn't move during contraction (usually proximal), while the insertion is the site that does move when the muscle contracts (usually distal). often tendons are at insertion.
posterior cruciate ligament origin and insertion
origin: posterior intercondylar region of tibia. insertion: inner medial surface of femur
facial artery
originates in the external carotid under the chin, and gives off branches that supply the neck and face
where does the internal carotid artery emerge into the cranial cavity?
out of the foramen lacerum (though it *does not* pass all the way through the lacerum) emerging near to the pituitary fossa
what percentage of the *adult* external auditory meatus is cartilagenous and what percent walled by bone?
outer 1/3rd cartilagenous, inner 2/3 walled by bone
saphenous opening
oval opening in the fascia lata, lies 3-4 cm inferolateral to the pubic tubercle. great saphenous vein passes through it.
superior colliculus
paired structure of the midbrain (means 'upper hill') essential for vision/eye movements
prechordal cartilage
paired, rod shaped cartilages in developing forebrain which form parts of the chondrocranium (the wings of sphenoid, and part of ethmoid bone)
which way does your palm face after internal rotation of shoulder (when arm is down by sides)
palm faces backwards
when discussing the hand, which term can be used instead of anterior?
palmar
mastoid process
palpable prominence of the temporal bone behind and below the ear, to which muscles are attached
constriction of pupil, ciliary body muscles, and sphincter pupillae: parasympathetic or sympathetic?
para
what symptoms may present if lower brachial plexus is compressed eg by a cervical rib
paraesthesia along ulnar border of forearm. wasting of small handle muscles (hypothenar/interossei, ulnar lumbricals + thumb adductors)
Bell's palsy
paralysis of the facial nerve (lower motoneuron lesion) causing muscular weakness on the affected side of the face. cannot close eyes, stop mouth dribbling (v disabling).
palsy
paralysis, especially that which is accompanied by involuntary tremors
ciliary ganglion
parasympathetic ganglion located in posterior orbit. Preganglionic axons from the Edinger-Westphal nucleus hitchike along the *oculomotor nerve* and form synapses with these cells
angular and supramarginal gyri are part of which lobe of brain
parietal
which vault bones don't contribute to the cranial base?
parietal bones
lambdoid suture connects which bones
parietal bones with the occipital bone
which lobe is involved with giving a sense of our individual 'body image' eg what is ours, and how tall/wide we are?
parietal lobe
within which gland does the fascial nerve divide into at least 5 branches?
parotid
which gland does the carotid tree pass through deep to the mandible?
parotid salivary gland
name the two parts of substantia nigra?
pars compacta, pars reticulata
which bones form the middle cranial fossa?
part of sphenoid, and two temporal bones
where do the deep muscles of the posterior forearm arise?
partly from interosseus membrane between ulna and radius, partly from shafts of bones themselves
greater sciatic foramen
partly ligament-bounded foramen in posterior pelvis through which many structures exit the pelvis into posterior thigh, including: piriformis muscle + gluteal/pudendal vessels + sciatic/pudendal/gluteal nerves
nasal placodes
parts of frontonasal prominance which invaginate to form the nasal pits and lateral + medial nasal processes
corticospinal tracts receive input from where?
parts of the *cerebral cortex* eg Primary motor cortex Premotor cortex Supplementary motor area somatosensory area
carotid canal
passage in the temporal bone through which the internal carotid artery enters the middle cranial fossa from the neck
what is the path of the cephalic vein in the shoulder region?
passes along medial border of deltoid + over pec minor insertion to drain into axillary vein over 2nd rib
what are the distal attachments of the fascia lata?
patella, margins of tibia and head of fibula. forms *popliteal fascia* behind the knee joint
rectus femoris insertion
patella, via tendon, then via patella ligament inserts into tibial tuberosity
name the ligaments of the knee
patellar ligament + tendon, collateral ligaments, cruciate ligaments
what does 'piriform' mean?
pear-shaped
which muscles make up the deeper layer of the pectoral region?
pec minor and subclavius
what makes up the anterior wall of the axilla?
pec minor, subclavius, clavipectoral fascia - and the more superior pec major and its surface fascia.
why is it rare to break the pelvis in only one place?
pelvis is a ring (like a hula hoop) you can't crush it and break it in only one place
blood supply to the breast
perforating branches of internal thoracic artery, thoracic branches of axillary artery
which fluid does the footplate of the stapes hammer against?
perilymph
which fluid fills the bony labrinth?
perilymph
name the sheath of connective tissue around the bundle of nerve fibres in a nerve fascicle
perineurium
which muscles are the key evertors the foot?
peroneus longus and peroneus brevis (with help from peroneus tertius)
which muscles are supplied by superficial peroneal nerve?
peroneus longus, peroneus brevis
which ligaments hold together the lateral ankle joint?
posterior talo-fibular and anteroir talo-fibular ligaments along with calcaneofibular ligament
where are your hamstrings?
posterior thigh
function of cruciate ligaments
prevent excess rotation between the femur and tibia. prevent femur from slipping forwards/backwards on the tibia
why do mutations in PCP signalling prevent normal closure of embryos
prevents closure 1, by stopping the bunched up neural crest cells from distributing evenly down the midline, and creating a clog of cells which the fold is unable to close around
what is the function of the transverse ligament of the knee?
prevents the menisci moving apart and keeps a degree of interaction between them (as they do have some mobility)
chondrocranium
primitive head bone; in humans forms base of skull and capsules protecting sensory organs. includes ethmoid, sphenoid + occipital bones.
cerebrum
principal part of the brain, found within front area of skull and consisting of two hemispheres separated by a fissure. responsible for the integration of complex sensory/neural functions, + initiation/ coordination of voluntary activity
olecranon
process of the ulna that forms the outer bump (funny bone) of the elbow and hooks into the fossa of the humerus when the arm is extended
lineage restriction
processes in which pluripotent stem cells are 'refined' so that they have more specific pathways of differentiation (aka become *multipotent*)
give 4 parietal lobe functions
processing sensory info (two point discrimination), constructional ability (right side); arithmetic, body image
pertussis toxin
produced by the bacterium Bordetella pertussis, which causes whooping cough. targets Gi g protein
phonation
production of speech sounds
kluver-bucy syndrome
profound amnesia, hyperphagia, hypersexuality, placidity, and visual agnosia (unable to recognise familiar objects/people) due to bilateral amygdala damage
latin word for 'deep'
profundus
intertrochanteric crest
pronounced line between the greater and lesser trochanters of femur, when they are viewed from the back
protraction vs retraction of scapula
protraction is forward movement of the scapula around the trunk. retraction is the opposite
benzodiazepine
psychoactive drugs which act as allosteric modulators to increase GABA inhibition
the tips of the greater wings of the sphenoid reach to which point?
pterion
adductor brevis origin
pubic arch - below pubic
which scapula movement is controlled by serratus anterior?
pulling scapula forwards, eg when throwing a forward punch, or planking on all fours
what action does latissimus dorsi enable?
pulling the arm down (eg when a monkey pulls itself up into a tree)
pituitary fossa
saddle-shaped depression in the body of the sphenoid bone. houses the pituitary gland
great saphenous vein is closely related to which nerve?
saphenous nerve
which muscle flexes both the hip and the knee?
sartorius
what are the 3 medial tendons of the knee?
sartorius, gracilis, semitendinosus
anterior ethmoidal nerve
sensory branch of opthalmic division of trigeminal. bizarre path through the orbit, up through cribiform plate, then down again to supply tip of nose
spinothalamic tract
sensory pathway originating in the skin; transmits info to the thalamus about pain, temperature (lateral pathway) itch and crude touch (anterior pathway)
obturator nerve supplies what?
sensory supply to medial thigh, motor supply to obturator externus, adductor longus, adductor brevis, adductor magnus, gracilis, and pectineus (inconstant)
cranial neural crest cells migrate to the heart to form what?
septation of aorta + pulmonary trunk
cauda equina syndrome
serious neurologic condition in which damage to the cauda equina causes acute loss of function to the spinal canal below the termination of the spinal cord (affects all of both legs)
patient can't abduct arm above 90 degrees. which muscle isn't working?
serratus anterior
which muscle lies over the chest wall region of the axilla
serratus anterior
which muscle lies over the medial wall of the axilla?
serratus anterior
what forms the medial wall of the axilla?
serratus anterior and the upper ribs
most common cause of a winged scapula
serratus anterior paralysis due to damaged long thoracic nerve
what are the brain ventricles?
set of 4 interconnected cavities in the brain, each containing a region of choroid plexus where CSF is produced. system is continuous with central canal of spinal cord
radiculopathy
set of conditions in which one or more nerves is affected and does not work properly. The emphasis is on the nerve root
reticular formation
set of interconnected nuclei throughout brainstem; key in controlling alertness/consciousness/heart/muscles/pain/habituation
spinocerebellar tracts
sets of axonal fibers originating in the spinal cord + terminating in ipsilateral cerebellum. Conveys info to cerebellum about limb/joint position
pectineus insertion
short tendon onto bone running from lesser trochanter to linea aspera
Bing sign
sign of UMN lesion - tapping on dorsum of big toe causes dorsiflexion not plantar flexion
cochlea
sinous snail shell tunnel of bone, running forwards from cavity of the vestibule. produces nerve impulses in response to sound vibrations (enables hearing)
rostral paraxial mesoderm forms what in the head?
skeletal elements in back of the head
orbital process
skull processes which project into the skull creating the eye socket
which body functions does the hypothalamus regulate?
sleep/awake, body temp, food intake, water intake/loss (blood osmolarity), sex (hormones/behaviour), stress response (stress hormones + blood flow to specific tissues) - basically the *ANS*
fascia lata
sleeve of fascia around all the muscles of the thigh (particularly enforced laterally as the iliotibial band)
describe motion of scapula around vertical and horizontal axis
sliding forwards and backwards (centre of rotation is upward) and curving up and down (centre of rotation horizontal)
what kind of rotation occurs within the knee joint just as it is reaching full extension?
slight *medial* rotation of the whole femur, around the lateral tibial condyle (to lock the joint in close packed position)
which have more subtle subsequent effects within neurones, fast acting receptors or slow acting receptors?
slow
how might a synapse be specialised for slow synaptic transmission?
small (electron) dense core vesicles (SDCVs) or large dense core vesicles (LDCVs). slow transmitters eg peptides. metabotropic receptors
antitragus
small anterior tubercle above ear lobule, opposite the tragus
sural nerve
small cutaneous branch of tibial nerve whilst in back of thigh/popliteal fossa. descends in subcutaneous fat down midline of posterior leg
capitulum
small eminence on a bone (as on the lateral distal end of the humerus) by which it articulates with another bone (head of radius)
anconeus
small muscle on the posterior elbow joint; assists extension of elbow
regimental badge area
small patch of skin which has sensory innervation from axillary nerve (important for testing axillary nerve function)
tragus
small spur of elastic fibrocartilage in front of the external auditory meatus
how might a synapse be specialised for fast synaptic transmission?
small synaptic vesicles (SSVs). fast transmitters eg glutamate, gaba, glycine, ACh. ionotropic receptors
hyaloid canal
small transparent canal in eye. carries lymph through vitreous humour from lens to optic nerve disc. aids in changing volume of lens
calcarine sulcus
small, horizontal sulcus at the posterior end of the *medial surface of brain*, superior to cerebellum
supraspinatus
small, rotator cuff muscle of the upper back. stabilises and abducts the arm at the shoulder
In the radius and ulna bones: are the 'head' ends the smallest or largest ends?
smallest
coracobrachialis
smallest of the 3 muscles that attach to the coracoid process of the scapula. upper and medial in the arm
3 risk factors for oral cancer?
smoking, drinking, male
glenoid cavity
socket in scapular that receives head of humerus
which muscle is a more slow twitch muscle, gasctrocnemius or soleus? why?
soleus. it is the deeper muscle and is more involved in posture (hence more fatigue resistant)
which pathways which run into the ventral posterior nucleus of thalamus? where do they go from there?
somatosensory pathways eg medial lemniscus, spinothalamic tract. from the VP nucleus they go to somatosensory cortex
which cranial nerves have sensory ganglia?
some say money matters, but my brother says big boobs matter more - except not CN I or II. so *V, VII, VIII, IX, X*
cranial vault
space in the skull surrounding the sides and above of the cranial cavity, occupied by the brain
upper motor neuron lesion symptoms
spastic paralysis, little muscle wasting, Babinsky sign
optic canal is located in which bone?
sphenoid
which bone forms part of both anterior and middle cranial fossa?
sphenoid
the pituitary gland rests on which bone?
sphenoid bone (the hypophysial fossa)
which sinus lies posterior to the pituitary fossa?
sphenoid sinus
describe the epithelium covering the cornea
stratified; 2-3 cells thick
How do you distinguish between facial paralysis from a stroke or a bells palsy
stroke is UMN lesion, and bells palsy is LMN lesion. in stroke, muscles around the eye and forehead can still be moved voluntarily, unlike bell's palsy
what can cause damage to fibres of corticospinal tract?
strokes, subdural hemorrhage, absesses and tumours, inflammation such as meningitis and multiple sclerosis, and trauma to the spinal cord, including from slipped discs
ulnar collateral ligament (elbow)
strong + thick triangular band at medial aspect of elbow, uniting distal humerus with proximal ulna
name the long sharp bony projection from the base of the temporal bone
styloid process
what separates the undersurface of the deltoid from the underlying shoulder joint?
subacromial bursa
which muscle pulls the humerus medially and inferiorly (during anterior shoulder dislocation)
subscapularis
which one of the rotator cuff muscles inserts onto the more anterior surface of the shoulder joint?
subscapularis
what forms the posterior wall of axilla?
subscapularis, teres major, tendon of latissimus dorsi
which particular basal ganglia part degenerates in parkinsons?
substantia nigra
which part of basal ganglia is most associated with dopamine release?d
substantia nigra pars compacta
which particular basal ganglia part is affects in hemiballismus?
subthalamic nucleus lesion
intraparietal sulcus
sulcus on lateral parietal lobe involved in directing eye movements/depth perception/visual attention+control/hand-eye coordination, as well as arithmetic ability
gluteus medius nerve supply
superior gluteal nerve (lumbosacral plexus)
nerve supply gluteus minimus
superior gluteal nerve (lumbosacral plexus)
tensor fasciae latae nerve supply
superior gluteal nerve (lumbosacral plexus)
what nerve supplies cricothyroid muscle
superior laryngeal nerve external branch
which parts of the brainstem do the cerebellar peduncles connect to?
superior penduncle connects to midbrain, middle P to the pons, and inferior P to the medulla
dorsum of tongue
superior surface of the tongue
name the first sulcus inferior to the lateral fissure
superior temporal
what is the blood supply of the thyroid?
superior thyroid artery (running with external branch of superior laryngeal nerve) and inferior thyroid artery branching from thyrocervical trunk
name the important branches of the external carotid artery
superior thyroid, lingual, facial, superficial temporal, maxillary
where is the flaccid tympanic membrane, and why is it important?
superior, anterior tympanic membrane, between the two malleolar folds. important because is particularly vascular
which 3 bones make up the major components of the lateral wall of nose?
superior, inferior and middle conchi
boundaries of popliteal fossa
superior: semimembranosus (medial) biceps femoris (lateral). inferior: medial + lateral heads of gastrocnemius
which is the more major function of biceps, flexion or supination?
supination. flexion can easily be achieved without biceps
which two muscles supinate the forarm?
supinator and biceps brachii
function of vitreous humour
supports lens/suspensory ligament, and produces a pressure which pushes the retina against the choroid (or it would fall off).
function of vertebral column
supports skull, anchors ribs, protects spinal cord
name the large bursa above/in front of knee, continuous with the synovial cavity of the joint
suprapatellar bursa
which muscle is involved in abduction of arm from 0° to 15°
supraspinatus
which rotator cuff muscle(s) abducts the arm?
supraspinatus
prevertebral fascia
surrounds the cervical vertebral column and its associated muscles (scalene, prevertebral, and deep muscles of the back). part forms the floor of posterior triangle.
what is dermal bone
aka membrane bone; bone derived from intramembranous ossification
genial spines
aka mental spines. 4 small projections of bone on the inside of the mandible in the midline, from which the geniohyoid and genioglossus tongue muscles arise
spring ligament
aka plantarcalcaneonavicular ligament. located inferior to head of talcus. connects sustentaculum tali and navicular
type Ia afferent fibre
aka primary afferent fiber. A type of sensory nerve which a component of a muscle spindle, which constantly monitors how fast a muscle stretch changes
zygomatic arch
aka the cheekbone. arch formed by the fusion of projections from the temporal and zygomatic bones
the lateral ventral posterior nucleus in the thalamus deals with somatosensory info from where in the body?
all of body below the neck
which nerve supplies the thenar muscles
all supplied by median nerve except adductor pollicis, which is by ulnar nerve
the synovial membrane of the knee joint lines which inner surfaces of the knee joint?
all surfaces except those covered with articular cartilage
what is the purpose of the late fusion of the triradiate cartilage?
allows growth + adjustment of the acetabulum along with the growth of the femoral head
inferior temporal sulcus
almost horizontal line across side of temporal lobe, separates the fusiform gyrus from the inferior temporal gyrus on its lateral side
superior temporal sulcus
almost horizontal line across side of temporal lobe, separating the superior temporal gyrus from the middle temporal gyrus
prazosin
alpha-1 adrenoceptor antagonist used to treat hypertension
clonidine
alpha2 adrenoceptor agonist + imidazoline receptor agonist. lowers BP and used to treat ADHD
which structure lies at the end of the tail of the caudate nucleus
amygdala
goitre
an abnormally enlarged thyroid gland
microcephaly
an abnormally small brain and hence small head
bicipital aponeurosis
aponeurosis of the biceps brachii, located in the cubital fossa of the elbow. separates superficial from deep structures in much of the fossa
name the meningeal layer which is stuck to the inside of the dura?
arachnoid
which pharyngeal arch does meckel's cartilage form from?
arch 1
stylohyoid and stylopharyngeus muscles are formed from cells of which pharyngeal arch?
arch 3
what do the pharyngeal arch muscles form into?
arches 1&2 produce basically all skeletal muscle of face. arches 3,4 &6 form some muscles of neck
what 'plugs' the saphenous opening?
areolar tissue called the cribriform fascia (perforated by blood + lymphatic vessels)
what are the attachments of the lumbricals in the hand?
arise from flexor digitorum profundus tendon, insert into the extensor expansion (connects two tendons!)
describe the pattern of the lumbricals in the foot
arise from the medial aspects of flexor digitorium longus tendons (note not from hallucis tendons).
long head of triceps
arises from infraglenoid tubercle of scapula and extends to the teres muscles. passes below abducted shoulder joint
path of lateral pectoral nerve
arises from lateral cord of brachial plexus below the clavicle, pierces clavipectoral fascia, enters pec major
describe path of musculocutaneous nerve
arises from lateral cord of brachial plexus, opposite pec major's lower border, and passes into coracobrachialis/biceps
path of medial pectoral nerve
arises from medial cord of brachial plexus below the clavicle, enters deep surface of pec MINOR. some fibres pass through to aid supply of pec major
where does pec minor attach to the skeleton?
arises from ribs 3,4,and 5 and inserts onto the coracoid process
where does the subclavius attach?
arises from upper surface of rib 1, and inserts under the clavicle
describe basic path of median nerve
arises in axila, from lateral and medial cords of brachial plexus. passes down with brachial artery to supply flexors below the elbow. continues through carpal tunnel to supply some of the hand
describe basic path of ulnar nerve
arises in axilla from medial cord of brachial plexus, descends on postero-medial humerus. travels with ulnar artery in forearm to enter hand
branchial cysts
arises on the lateral part of the neck due to failure of branchial arches to fuse in development
at what age do the three bones of the innominate bone fuse?
around puberty
name the structures which short-circuit blood capillaries
arteriovenous anastomoses
arthroscopic stabilisation of shoulder
arthroscope camera inserted into shoulder. using small anchors and suturing, the labrum/torn tissue from a dislocation is reattached
when does the patella articulate with the femur, and when with the tibia?
articulates with femur at all times. *never* with the tibia
what forms the inner wall of the larynx
arytenoid cartilages posteriorly, epiglottis above, membranes and muscles anteriorly
where does the axillary artery become the brachial
as soon as it enters the arm
where does the obturator nerve divide into anterior and posterior?
as soon as it passes through the obturator foramen
describe the 2 main branches of lateral sulcus
ascending (aka vertical) ramus and anterior (aka horizontal) ramus. they divide the inferior frontal gyrus - seen in yellow here
how does the larynx move during swallowing?
ascends up to the back of the palette (and epiglottis flaps forwards to block airway)
how can you easily test the hypoglossal nerve
ask patient to stick out tongue (genioglossus is innervated by hypoglossal nerve)
how could you test the olfactory nerve?
ask patients to identify strong smells eg coffe/chocolate through each nostril in turn
how would you test flexion of DIP?
ask them to make an OK
name the place where the temporal, occipital and parietal bones meet
asterion
why is it important to keep the head back when patient is under anaesthesia?
at a stage of anaesthesia, the jaw muscles relax and the tongue etc falls back. dangerous as will block airway unless head is back
where does lingual artery arise? where from?
at level of hyoid bone, from the external carotid artery
where doesn't the cranial dura completely fuse to the vault periosteum?
at sinuses or places where dura folds into fibrous brain septa
where does the sciatic nerve divide?
at some point between pelvis and patella
supraoptic region of hypothalamus
the SON; a nucleus of magnocellular neurosecretory cells in the hypothalamus, next to optic chiasm. produces ADH
sphenoid bone is wedged across the cranial base between which bones
the front and two temporal bones
which bones form the anterior cranial fossa
the frontal bone, ethmoid bone, and part of sphenoid bone
which major vein pierces the opening in the fascia lata at the superiomedial thigh?
the great saphenous vein (saphenous opening)
what part of the sphenoid bone contributes to the vault at pterion
the greater wings
which part of sphenoid bone forms the floor + sides of middle cranial fossa
the greater wings
what overlies the white matter of the cerebellum
the grey matter of the cerebellar cortex
the anterior half of the palate undergoes endochondral ossification to become what?
the hard palate
what does the capitulum of humerus articulate with?
the head of the radius
intervertebral foramina
the holes between spinal vertebrae via which spinal nerves etc escape
what stops the thyroid rising up in the neck?
the infrahyoid (strap) muscles
nerves/vessels pass into the front of thigh between the bony pelvis and what?
the inguinal ligament
cranial branches of the middle meningeal artery pierce what to enter the vault bones?
the inner surface of periosteum
where does the latissimus dorsi insert?
the intertubercular groove
what divides the anterior cavity of eye into ant. and post. chambers?
the iris
which joint do most of the anterior thigh muscles extend?
the knee joint (not hip joint)
why couldn't you lift heavy things if you didn't have a larynx?
the larynx acts as a valve
the deep branch of the ulnar nerve supplies all the intrinsic hand muscles medial to flexor pollicis longus EXCEPT
the lateral 2 lumbricals (median nerve)
muscular process of arytenoid
the lateral angle of each arytenoid cartilage pyramid; gives insertion to cricoarytenoid muscles
dorsal ganglion
the most commonly seen ganglion cyst; located along the extensor carpi radialis brevis as it passes over the dorsum of the wrist joint
which part of the retina receives light from the temporal fields?
the nasal (medial) part
what bodypart is formed from the developing body of the atlas vertebra
the odontoid process of the axis vertebra
what is the ostium of the maxillary sinus?
the opening of the sinus into the nasal cavity (through which the sinus drains). highly sensitive - if blocked, causes sinusitis
optic foramen
the opening to the optic canal. transmit optic nerve and ophthalmic artery (with accompanying sympathetic nerve fibres) into each orbit
which order are the cranial nerves numbered in?
the order in which they come off the brain/brainstem (from front to back)
acromion
the outermost point of the spine of the scapula
what are spinous processes
the palpable bumps of the spine. point posteriorly and downwards
the tentorium cerebelli deflects the wight of the cranial hemispheres towards where?
the parietal bones which it attaches to
appendicular skeleton
the pectoral girdle and the pelvic girdle and the upper and lower limbs
where do new cells of the cornea grow from?
the periphery of cornea - stem cells in the limbus. there are no stem cells in the cornea
what forms the boundary between middle + posterior cranial fossae?
the petrous crest
what does the middle ear communicate with anteriorly?
the pharynx, through the eustachian tube
horns of menisci
the pointed ends of the menisci, pointing towards the intercondylar eminence
from which side are the cruciate ligaments bare and uncovered?
the posterior (no infrapatellar fat pad etc)
which cord does the radial nerve come from?
the posterior cord
what forms the posterior cord of the brachial plexus?
the posterior divisions of the upper, middle and lower trunks
the scapula region takes part in the formation of which wall of the axilla?
the posterior wall
medial malleolus
the prominence on the inner side of the ankle, formed by the lower end of the tibia
if somebody can't extend there wrist (they have 'wrist drop') which nerve has been damaged?
the radial nerve
anterior and posterior compartments of the forearm are separated by what?
the radius, ulna and their interosseus membrane
what happens in brachial plexus inside the posterior triangle?
the rami fuse to form the upper, middle and lower trunks. 4 branches come off - *dorsal scapular,* *suprascapular nerves, nerve to subclavius, long thoracic nerve*
why are anastomoses important when an artery gets blocked?
the remaining arteries in the anastomoses mesh can enlarge and to produce a collateral circulation
which side of the brain supplies the lower face with innervation?
the right brain supplies lower left face, and vice versa (important in strokes)
from which end of the neural tube does the brain develop?
the rostral (nearest nose/mouth) end
sacroiliac joints
the sacrum is wedged between the two pelvic bones, joined by strong ligaments
why do you often get cyclopia in holoprosencephaly
the same process which splits the brain into left and right, splits the eye field from a single part into two. this is defected in holoprosencephaly
which muscles are 'like lines that keep up the tent pole' of the neck?
the scalenes
vestibular ligament
the sharp inferior free border of the quadrangular membrane in the inner larynx, joining the angle of the thyroid laminae with the bottom of the arytenoid cartilages
falciform margin
the sharp outer edge of the saphenous opening
where does the 'base' of the breast extend from?
the side of the sternum to the edge of pec major (with some glandular tissue extending beyond the edge of the muscle to lie on the medial wall of axilla)
what part of the ethmoid bone forms the medial walls of the orbit?
the sides
on the inside of the skull, what is the groove behind the jugular foramen called?
the sigmoid sinus
interventricular foramen
the small opening (on both the right and left sides) that connects the third ventricle in the diencephalon with the lateral ventricle in the cerebral hemisphere
acetabulum
the socket of the hipbone, into which the head of the femur fits. Y shaped cartilage fuses during infancy
extensor expansion
the special connective attachments by which the extensor tendons insert into the phalanges. These flattened tendons of extensor muscles span the proximal and middle phalanges
plantar aponeurosis
thick connective tissue on sole of foot, from calcaneus to the MP joints. much stronger than palmar aponeurosis; like an extension of achilles tendon
short plantar ligament
thick fibrous bundle on base of foot between calcaneus anterior tubercle + cuboid bone
palmar aponeurosis
thickened, central portion of the deep palmar fascia; radiates toward bases of fingers. some muscle tendons attach to it
ependyma
thin epithelium-like lining of ventricular system of brain+central canal. One of the four types of neuroglia in CNS. Involved in the production of CSF
perpendicular plate of ethmoid
thin plate of bone projecting downward from the crista galli of the ethmoid; it forms part of the nasal septum
buccinator
thin quadrilateral muscle, arising from maxilla, pterygomandibular band and mandible. Forms anterior part of the cheek + lateral wall of the oral cavity.
articular disc
thin, oval plate of fibrocartilage present in several joints which separates synovial cavities (like a larger version of a meniscus)
what does the word gracile mean?
thin/slender
why might patients with lung disease hold on to the side of their bed/fix their pectoral girdles when struggling to breathe?
this enables the pec minor to raise the rib cage in contraction (instead of lowering it)
why might a patient with breast cancer be asked to put their hands on their hips during palpation?
this fixes the pectoral muscles and their surface fascia in place. any palpated lumps which are stable in this posture are likely to have invaded the pectoral fascia/muscle (bad news)
in which regions of the spinal cord might you find a lateral horn of grey matter?
thoracic
which muscles are supplied by trigeminal nerve?
those from the first pharyngeal arch; muscles of mastication and tensor muscles
cuneiform bones
three bones of the tarsus between the navicular bone and the metatarsals
inferior thyroid artery arises from which artery?
thyrocervical trunk - a branch of subclavian artery
which four main structures form the outer wall of the larynx
thyroid cartilage + thyrohyoid membrane + cricoid cartilage + crico-thyroid membrane
midline swellings in the neck which move when you swallow are likely to be which kind of swelling?
thyroid swelling
semimembranosus insertion
tibia - groove in posterior medial condyle (fanned out as aponeurotic expansions which bleed with knee joint capsule)
which nerve supplies the hamstrings?
tibial division of the sciatic nerve, except the short head of the biceps femoris which is common peroneal branch
gastrocnemius nerve supply
tibial nerve
nerve supply flexor hallucis
tibial nerve
plantaris nerve supply
tibial nerve
soleus nerve supply
tibial nerve
tibialis posterior nerve supply
tibial nerve
which nerve supplies the posterior leg?
tibial nerve
sciatic nerve divides anteriorly and posteriorly into what?
tibial nerve and fibular nerve respectively
nerve supply popliteus
tibial part of sciatic nerve
semitendinosus nerve supply
tibial part of sciatic nerve
biceps femoris nerve supply
tibial part of sciatic nerve (long head) and common peroneal part of sciatic nerve (short head)
vastus intermedius insertion
tibial tuberosity via patella
vastus medialis insertion
tibial tuberosity via patella ligament
you suspect dislocated shoulder. why might you ask for an x-ray in two different planes?
to work out whether the head of the humerus has moved anteriorly or posterior
dura
tough, collagenous membrane enveloping the brain and spinal cord
strychnine
toxic pesticide which competes with inhibitory transmitter glycine, resulting in excitatory state/muscle convulsions
diploe
trabecular bone layer found between the outer and inner tables of cortical bone, in short/flat bones such as the skull
what word is used instead of 'nerve' in the CNS?
tract
vestibulospinal tract
tract of spinal cord. relays info from vestibular nuclei to motoneurons (important in positioning and balance)
function of the middle ear ossicles
transmit the vibrations of the tympanic membrane into the fluid within the inner ear
function of pelvic girdle
transmits weight of trunk to lower limbs. provides bone framework for for muscle attachment. contain + protect organs
describe the facets for rib attachment seen in thoracic vertebrae
transvere costal facet (rib tubercle) superior costal facet (head of rib) inferior costal facet (head of rib below)
which two muscles does the deep cervical fascia split to enclose completely as it surrround the whole neck
trapezius and sternocleidomastoid
intention tremor
trembling of a part of the body when attempting a precise movement, associated especially with disease of the cerebellum (ataxia of arms)
what shape is adductor longus?
triangular
anatomical snuff box
triangular depression on the lateral surface of the wrist on full extension of the thumb. weak point for fractures
coronoid process
triangular eminence projecting forward from the anterior proximal portion of the ulna
adductor pollicis
triangular intrinsicle muscle of deep palm/thumb. not truely part of thenar eminance. adducts the thumb
infraclavicular fossa
triangular region of the chest just below the clavicle, between the deltoid and pectoralis major muscles (label D)
which muscles form the posterior compartment of the arm
triceps brachii, anconeus (sort of deltoid too)
the superior orbital fissure, foramen ovale, and foramen rotundum each transmit a large division of which nerve?
trigeminal nerve
describe cranial nerve Vi
trigeminal nerve; largest cranial nerve responsible for sensation in face + motor functions such as biting and chewing. arises anterolateral surface of pons, runs forwards over petrous crest, forms sensory ganglion in meckel's cave.
name the cartilage between the ilium, ischium, pubis in childhood
triradiate cartilage
which is the only cranial nerve which emerges from the back of the brainstem?
trochlear nerve
describe cranial nerve IV
trochlear nerve; threadlike, supplies superior oblique muscle. arises from posterior midbrain, runs under free edge of tentorium, passing through lateral cavernous sinus wall, through superior orbital fissure into orbit
name the middle region of the hypothalamus
tuberal region
vocal folds
twin infoldings of mucous membrane stretched from back to front, across the larynx. They vibrate, modulating the flow of air being expelled from the lungs during phonation. controlled by vagus nerve
which joint does the gracilis span?
two - the hip and knee joints
infraorbital canal
two bony tunnels running through floor of orbit (passage for the infraorbital artery, vein, nerve) + opening either side of nose as *infraorbital foramina*
platysma
two broad muscles located either side of the neck, + innervated by facial nerve; extends from lower jaw to clavicle + involved in moving the mouth/ jaw
piriform fossae
two fossae/sinuses either side of the larygeal orifice involved in speech. food can become stuck in them
palatine bone
two irregularly shaped bones that form the back of the hard palate + help form nasal cavity / floor of the orbits
what are transverse processes
two lateral projections of vertebra (to which the head of the rib attaches in T vertebra)
saphenous veins
two main large superficial veins of the leg (great and large)
sagittal suture joins which bones
two parietal bones
occipital condyles
two rounded knobs either side of the foramen magnum that articulate with the atlas vertebra
which nerve travels behind the medial epicodyle of the elbow joint?
ulnar nerve
which nerves innervate the interossei of hand?
ulnar nerve innervates all 7 interossei
what symptoms might you see in medial meniscus injury?
unable to fully extend the knee (due to torn piece of cartilage getting caught) and tenderness in points 1&2
give the 3 entry routes of nerves and vessels into the lower limb
under inguinal ligament into front of thigh, through obturator foramen into medial thigh, through greater sciatic foramen into posterior thigh
popliteus action
unlocks knee by laterally rotating femur. weak knee flexor
which movement is controlled by levator scapulae
unsurprisingly, lifting up the scapula (eg when shrugging)
how should you pull the auricle in order to straighten the external auditory meatus for examination?
up and backwards
how many myelin segments can an oligodendrocyte make?
up to 40 or 50
peroneus longus origin
upper 2/3 lateral fibula
extensor digitorum longus origin
upper 3/4 anterior fibula + intermuscular septum
what are the two parts of the medulla?
upper open part where dorsal surface of medulla is formed by the fourth ventricle. lower closed part where the fourth ventricle has narrowed into the central canal
neurocranium
upper portion/vault of the skull which surrounds + protects the brain, includes front + parietal bones etc
what might anosmia be caused by?
upper resp. tract infection or cold, brain injury to olfactory system/olfactory nerve (eg fracture of cribriform plate/neuroma or meningioma compressing olf bulb?)
where does the epiglottis project from its attachment?
upwards, behind the thyrohyoid membrane, hyoid bone + tongue
which veins drain the thyroid gland?
usually 3; superior, middle, inferior
where are peptide neurotransmitters synthesised?
usually in the neuron cell body, with further processing during passage down axon
does the common peroneal nerve pass through the popliteal fossa?
usually yes, enters with tibial nerve at upper angle. it then leaves fossa by curling over its *lateral* edge
which regions of neural crest does the enteric NS arise from?
vagal and lumbosacral
which nerve is found associated with the common carotid artery in neck, vagus or phrenic?
vagus
emissary veins
valveless veins which normally drain from the dural venous sinuses into veins that lie outside the skull. pass all the way through vault bones
how long does it take after UMN lesion for spinal shock to end and hyper-reflexia to begin?
varies - at least hours, can be weeks
what size are lymph nodes?
varies; between a pin head to a large bean
name the 3 vasti muscles in the quadriceps
vastus laterallis, vastus intermedius, vastus medialis (names describe relation to femur)
woodruff's area
venous plexus at back of nose (posterior part of inferior meatus) linked to more dangerous nosebleeds often in elderly patients
is the brachial plexus derived from dorsal or ventral rami?
ventral
which arteries supply spinal cord?
ventral artery (most of cord) and two posterior arteries
which nuclei are the main motor nuclei in the thalamus. what are their roles?
ventral lateral and ventral anterior nuclei of thalamus . receive input from the globus pallidus, substantia nigra and the cerebellar nuclei and sends output to frontal cortex, including motor cortex
which is the main somatosensory nucleus of the thalamus?
ventral posterior nucleus
mandibular prominance
ventral prominence formed by bifurcation of the first pharyngeal arch in the embryo. *unite to form lower jaw + chin*
difference between vertebral foramen and intervertebral foramen
vertebral = formed by arch and body of each vertebra. intervertebral = passage between two+ adjacent vertebrae formed by notches on the pedicles
branches of subclavian artery
vertebral artery, internal thoracic artery, thyrocervical trunk, costocervical trunk, dorsal scapular artery. (+ it itself becomes the axillary artery at lateral border of 1st rib)
median septum (tongue)
vertical layer of fibrous tissue, dividing the tongue in the midline
what shape is the popliteal fossa?
vertically stretched diamond
ossicle
very small bone, especially those in middle ear
gastrocnemius insertion
via tendo calcaneus into calcaneus
soleus insertion
via tendo calcaneus into calcaneus
bitemporal hemianopia
vision is missing in the outer half of both the right and left visual field, usually associated with tumour (pituitary?) pressing on optic chiasma
name the free border of conus elasticus
vocal ligament (or *vocal fold* when including the covering mucous membrane)
what are the components of the nasal septum?
vomer bone, perpendicular plate of ethmiod, septal cartilage, crest of maxillary bone, crest of palatine bone
what is *complete* flexion of the knee?
when calf comes into contact with back of thigh
where does the femoral artery become popliteal?
when it passes through adductor hiatus
where does the short saphenous vein dip deeper and pierce the deep fascia?
when it reaches the back of the kneeand enters the popliteal vein
trendelenburg sign
when patient stands on one leg, the contralateral leg drops due to paralysed iposilateral gluteus medius + minimus.
when does climbing fibre in cerebellum fire?
when there is an error of movement - important for motor *learning*
what scapula movement does the serratus anterior enable?
when whole muscle contracts, it pulls scapula forwards around the chest wall (protraction). when only upper or lower fibres contract, produces lower or upper rotations of the scapula on the chest wall
what do the semilumar canals do
when you turn head/body, fluid in them continues swirling after movement, hitting sensors in the ampulla and telling your brain how you're turning
pterion
where the frontal, parietal , temporal and sphenoid bones meet
how are lymph capillaries different to blood capillaries?
wider, irregular shape, more permeable to particular matter + cells
gluteus minimus origin
wing of ilium, between anterior and inferior gluteal lines
why might the diploe increase in thickness in some forms of anaemia?
within the diploe, there is active erythopoiesis throughout life (so called 'red bone marrow')
are trapezius + sternocleidomastiod muscles supplied by nerve XI?
yes
does prevertebral fascia cover scalene muscles
yes
does the corticospinal tract cross the midline?
yes
will synapses form readily in mixed neuron-glia brain cultures?
yes
can a neurotransmitter be both excitatory and inhibitory?
yes (eg GABA can be excitatory during development) but never at the same time
can damaged axons regerate new branches to reach their synapse?
yes - *only in the peripheral nervous system*
could the bicipital aponeurosis be penetrated when attempting to take blood from a vein?
yes needles can penetrate it - underneath lies the brachial artery and median nerve - be careful!
have humans ever had opposable toes?
yes we used to have grasping toes but evolved them out - some of our muscles still sort of show this
are the sternocleidomastoid and trapezius enclosed within the investing cervical fascia?
yes. it envelopes all of the neck below the skin, like a stocking. in fact, these two muscles alone are inclosed between two layers of this fascia as it splits to completely surround them
name 2 alpha-2 adrenoceptor antagonists
yohimbine, atipamazole
where can you observe the thalamus on a brain?
you can't (buried deep within cerebral hemispheres.) however its medial edge is visible in half brain specimens
supination of forearm is controlled by which myotome?
C6
flexion of wrist is controlled by which myotome?
C6,7
adduction and medial rotation of the shoulder is controlled by which myotome?
C6,7,8
extension of elbow is controlled by which myotome?
C7,8
finger/thumb extension is controlled by which myotome?
C7,8
finger/thumb flexion is controlled by which myotome?
C7,8
name some GABA B antagonists
CGP35358
the composition of perilymph is similar to which other bodily fluid?
CSF
adductor magnus action
adducts thigh. posterior part of muscle can extend thigh
name the veins in the cubital fossa
cephalic, basilic, median cubital
2 basal ganglia diseases with hyperkinetic symptoms
huntingtons and ballism
cerebral aqueduct
CSF-filled canal that runs through the midbrain connecting the third and fourth ventricles
which roots converge to form the upper trunk of brachial plexus?
C5 and 6
flexion of elbow is controlled by which myotome?
C5,6
what are the nerve roots of the radial nerve?
C5,6,7,8,T1
principle dermatomes for referred pain from the diaphragm
C3-4
what is the root origin of suprascapular nerve?
C4,5,6 (branches from superior trunk)
abduction of the shoulder is controlled by which myotome?
C5
lateral rotation of the shoulder is controlled by which myotome?
C5
name the term for the inability to perform rapid, alternating movements. what usually causes this?
Dysdiadochokinesia. a feature of cerebellar ataxia/difficulty switching muscle agonists and antagonists on/off
1st cranial nerve is called
olfactory nerve
which kind of dopamine receptors are expressed on
D1 direct pathway, D2 indirect pathway
nerve supply of iliacus
L2 + L3
what is a collateral in neuroanatomy?
a branch of an axon
which nerve is in the *medial* wall of the cavernous sinus?
abducens
grace a dieu fascia
aka bicipital aponeurosis
vastus lateralis action
extends leg
what forms the medial boundary of the apex of the axilla?
first rib
name the immune cells of the CNS
microglia
name paralysis in both legs
paraplegia
which nerve supplies the triceps brachii proximal to the spiral groove?
radial
how many cords in the brachial plexus
3
how many fingers wide should you be able to open your mouth?
3
how many trunks in the brachial plexus?
3
purkinje cells excitatory or inhibitory?
inhibitory
insertion of obturator internus
inner surface of greater trochanter with the gemelli
which part of the brainstem enlarges the least in development?
midbrain
name cranial nerves
(Oh oh oh to touch and feel virgin girls vagina, ah hooray) olfactory, optic nerve, oculomotor, trochlear, trigeminal, abducens, facial, vestibular cochulea, glossopharyngeal, vagus, accesory, hypoglossal
olecranon bursitis
(students elbow) collection of bursal fluid in the elbow joint causing pain. caused by injury/always leaning on elbow
which mnemonic helps you remember the interossei
*DAB 4 PAD 3.* The 4 dorsal interossei abduct, and the 3 palmar interossei adduct
4 types of glia inPNS
1. Myelinating Schwann cells 2. Non-my elinating (Remak) Schwann cells 3. Satellite cells 4. Enteric glia
at which week of development does the thyroid become functional?
10th-12th week
how many muscles on back of the arm?
12 (6 superficial, 6 deep)
cranial nerves
12 paired nerves which emerge from skull or cranium not spinal cord
how many thoracic vertebrae/nerves are there?
12 vertebrae, 12 nerves
fibrous septa divide each breast into roughly how many lobes?
15+
describe the clinoid processes
2 anterior c.processes and two posterior, located at the cornoers of the pituitary fossa. function as attachment points for tentorium cerebelli
which transverse fissures separate the lobes of the cerebellum?
2 fissures - the primary and posterolateral fissures
extensor pollicis longus and brevis
2 muscle located dorsally on the forearm and hand which extends the thumb
what do the first 4 pharyngeal arch pouches form into?
1st = internal auditory tube + primary tympanic recess, 2nd = palatine tonsil, 3rd = parathyroid gland (inferior) and thymus. 4th = parathyroid gland (superior) and ultimobranchial body.
what forms from the 2nd, 3rd, 4th pharyngeal arch clefts?
2nd arch grows out, obscuring the clefts and trapping in a (usually) transient lateral cervical sinus.
hyoid arch
2nd pharyngeal arch. assists in forming the side and front of the neck
which ribs does the breast extend between
2nd rib superiorly, 6th rib inferiorly
spinal nerves
31 pairs of nerves emerging from each side of the spinal cord (each attached to the cord by two roots: ventral and dorsal)
how many teeth do we have?
32
how many major cartilages form the larynx?
4
what are the nuchal lines?
4 lines (inferior, median, superior and highest) across the occipital bone, to which neck muscles attach
rotator cuff
4 muscles (+ their tendons) which act to stabilize the shoulder
lumbricals
4 muscles in each palm/foot which flex the metacarpophalangeal joints and extend the interphalangeal joints.
name the 3 hypothenar muscles
Abductor digiti minimi, Flexor digiti minimi, Opponens digiti minimi
cerebellum is located above which ventricle?
4th
how many metacarpals are there?
5
how many roots are there of the brachial plexus?
5
pharyngeal arches
5 mesodermal outpouchings which grow either side of developing pharynx in weeks 4-5 of embryo. first three contribute to structures above the larynx (face/jaw), whereas the last two contribute to the larynx and trachea
which muscles are supplied by the deep peroneal nerve?
5 muscles: EDL, TIbialis anterior, EHL, EDB, peroneus tertius
how many sacral vertebrae/nerves are there?
5 vertebra (fused together), 5 nerves
all monoamines act through slow metabotropic receptors EXCEPT?
5HT3 receptor
peroneus brevis insertion
5th metatarsal, peroneal tubercle
genicular arteries
6 arteries in the leg which anastomose in the knee region; 1 branching down from the femoral artery, the rest from the popliteal artery
describe lymph node levels in the neck
6 levels. 1=under the chin, 2 3 and 4=high, mid and low jugular, 5 = posterior triangle and 6 = central neck
what does the pinna develop from?
6 mesenchymal proliferations called auricular hillocks (3 on each side of the 1st+2nd pharyngeal arches). ext aud meatus forms in cleft between these arches
how many extraoccular muscles are there?
7
how many vertebra in each region of vertebral column?
7 cervical, 12 thoracic, 5 lumbar, 5 (fused) sacral
how many cervical vertebrae/nerves are there?
7 vertebrae, 8 nerves
how many carpals are there?
7/8 (3/4 proximal row, 4 distal row)
difference between GABA A and GABA B receptor
A = ionotropic (for fast inhibition). B = metabotropic (for slow inhibition). A is also pentameric, whereas B is dimeric
type C nerve fibre
A sensory, unmyelinated/small/slow fibre. They include Postganglionic fibers in the ANS, and nerve fibres at the dorsal roots (IV fiber)
which 2 types of neurotransmitters are broken down in the synaptic cleft?
ACh and peptides
4 kinds of glutamate receptors
AMPAR, NMDAR, Kainate, metabotropic
which stains could you use in the fetal skull to see types of bone growth?
Alcian blue (for cartilage) and Alizarin red (for bone)
which mnemonic helps you remember the thenar and hypothenar eminences?
All For One And One For All (from thumb to pinky)
4 most prevalent NTDs
Anencephaly- Spina bifida (open or closed)- Cranio-rachischisis- Encephalocele
name thalamic nuclei
Anterior nucleus, Dorsal medial nucleus, Pulvinar nuclei, Ventral Posterior nucleus, Ventral Lateral, Ventral Anterior nuclei , Thalamic reticular nucleus, Lateral and medial geniculate nuclei , intralaminar nuclei
which cranial nerve innervates the first 4 pharyngeal arches?
Arch 1 - Trigeminal Arch 2 - Facial Arch 3 - Glossopharyngeal Arch 4 - Vagus
what is the inheritence pattern of treacher collins syndrome
Autosomal dominant trait with variable penetrance (60% caused by new mutations in TCOF1 gene)
name some GABA A antagonists
BICUCULLINE, (flumazenil)
subdural haematoma
Blood gathers between the dura mater and brain. Usually caused by tears in bridging veins which cross the subdural space
pronation of forearm is controlled by which myotome?
C6
damage to which nerve roots affect flexion of the wrist?
C6 C7
extension of wrist is controlled by which myotome?
C6,7
which roots converge to form lower trunk of brachial plexus
C8 and T1
lumbar cistern
CSF filled area between the end of the spinal cord and the end of the vertebral column. Cerebrospinal fluid is often sampled here (lumbar puncture)
describe the differences in spinous process of C, T and L vertebrae
Cervical = thin, bifid, directly posterior. thoracic = long, sharp, projects inferiorly. lumbar = short, blunt, rectangular and directly posterior
contents of carotid sheaths
Common carotid artery (bifurcates within sheath into external and internal). Internal jugular vein. Vagus nerve. Cervical lymph nodes
describe the neurovascularisation of pharyngeal arches
Each arch will form cartilage, muscle and artery, and will be innervated by a single cranial nerve
prolapsed medial temporal lobe
Extreme raised intracranial pressure may force the medial part of the temporal lobe of the brain down over the free edge of the tentorium cerebelli. traps the oculomotor nerve (pupil increasingly dilates)
name the nuclei of the cerebellum?
Fastigial, Globose, Emboliform, Dentate (fat girls eat donuts)
name some GABA B agonists
GABA, BACLOFEN
name some GABA A agonists
GABA, muscimol, (benzodiazepines + barbiturates)
the node of the primitive streak is an amniote organizer. what does this mean?
Grafts of prospective notochord (the node) can be added in and this node will organise differentiation to from a seperate neural plate
which cranial nerves contain only sensory fibres?
I, II, VIII (olfactory, optic, vestibulocochlear)
which cranial nerves contain only motor fibres?
III, IV, VI, XI, XII (oculomotor, trochlear, abducent, accessory, hypoglossal)
which rotator cuff muscle(s) externally rotates the shoulder?
Infraspinatus & teres minor
superior border of femoral triangle
Inguinal ligament
what is name and nerve supply of 'lifter of upper eyelid'
Levator palpebrae superioris. two supplies - part of muscle supplied by occulomotor nerve + part involuntary smooth muscle supplied by sympathetic. both needed for complete eye opening
name 2 NMDAR antagonists
MK-801, Ketamine
mneumonic for contents of femoral triangle
NAVY (femoral nerve, artery, vein, deep lymphatics)
splotch mutation
PAX3 (a gene formerly known as Splotch) is transcription factor involved in ear/eye/face development. splotch mutations cause waardenburg syndrome
neural crest contributes to which structures in the head?
Neurons and Glia of the brain, some bones of neurocranium, chondrocranium and viscerocranium, Odontoblasts of teeth, Connective tissues of face. *basically the whole anterior of head*
how is cleft palate treated?
Normally corrected surgically between 3-8 months of age
flexor hallucis longus origin and insertion
Originates: lower 2/3 posterior tibia. Inserts: base of distal phalanx of great toe
L-type Ca2+ channels in heart; which type are found in the brain?
P-, Q- and N-type
Remak schwann cells
PNS glial cells which surround smaller axons - do not myelinate the axons
describe the generic pathway of nerves from a peripheral somatosensory receptor to the cerebral cortex?
Receptor causes firing of Primary sensory neurons; these synapse within spinal cord with 2nd order neurons. These cross the midline + synapse with thalamic neurons which send info to cortex
what acronym helps you remember the stages of the brachial plexus
Red Tigers Drink Cold Beer
piriformis nerve supply
S1 + S2 (small direct branches of sacral plexus)
how do you remember the jerk relexes by counting to 8?
S1,2 achilles/ankle jerk, 3,4 knee, C5, 6 elbow flexion, C7,8 elbow extension
which acryonym helps you remember the rotator cuff muscles?
SITS
which rotator cuff muscle(s) internally rotates the shoulder?
Subscapularis
lumbosacral plexus
The anterior divisions of the 5 lumbar + 5 sacral nerves and coccygeal nerve (the first lumbar nerve being frequently joined by a branch from the twelfth thoracic)
alisphenoid
The greater wing of the sphenoid bone
neural arch
The posterior projection from the body of a vertebra that encloses the vertebral foramen; consists of paired pedicles and laminae. spinous, transverse, and articular processes arise from the arch
why do most extradural hemorrhages occur in the temporal bone region?
The pterion region which overlies the middle meningeal artery is relatively weak and prone to injury
retinaculum
a band around tendons that holds them in place; not part of any muscle
name the long flexors of the toes
Tom Dick + Harry muscles (Tibialis posterior, flexor digitorum longus, flexor hallucis longus)
what is TCOF1
Treacher Collins-Franceschetti syndrome 1 gene. encodes protein called 'treacle' found in nucleous - important in ribosome biogenesis especially neural folds/pharygeal arches of embryos. mutations in gene cause treacher collins syndrome
where is the only place in the brain which uses histamine as a neurotransmitter?
Tuberomammillary nucleus
which cranial nerves contain mixed motor and sensory fibres?
V, VII, IX, X (trigeminal, facial, glossopharyngeal, vagus)
name the 3 groups of descending motor pathways of the spinal cord
Ventromedial pathways, lateral pathways, corticospinal tract
optic chiasma
X-shaped structure formed below the brain (anterior to pituitary stalk) where the two optic nerves cross over each other
what could cause a ganglion cyst?
a 'one-way valve' effect, caused by arthritis/injury/no reason at all
what closes the fenestra cochleae opening?
a 2ndary tympanic membrane
function of gluteal muscles
abduct (>medius and minimus) and extend (>maximus) hip. also stabilises by contracting to balance on only that leg
what is the action of gluteus maximus and tensor fasciae latae contraction together?
abduction
name the long intrinsic muscles of the foot??
abductor hallucis, flexor digitorum brevis, abductor digiti minimi
3 long tendons of the thumb
abductor pollicis longus, extensor policis longus, extensor policis longus
action of gluteus minimus
abducts thigh
gluteus medius action
abducts thigh. can also medially rotate (anterior fibres) and laterally rotate (posterior fibres) the thigh
Hypotelorism
abnormal decrease in distance between any two organs, eg orbital hypotelorism
mastoid antrum
air space in the petrous portion of the temporal bone, communicating posteriorly with the mastoid cells and anteriorly with the epitympanic recess of middle ear
middle ear
air-filled *tympanic caivity* in petrous temporal bone. contains ear ossicles (malleus, incus, stapes). communicates with mastoid antrum posteriorly and with auditory (eustachian) tube anteriorly
what is ulnar deviation?
aka adduction - moving hand in direction of ulnar
meckel's cave
aka cavum trigeminale. arachnoidal pouch containing CSF on apex of petrous bone. contains trigeminal sensory ganglion
anterior compartment of arm
aka flexor compartmt. contains biceps brachii, brachialis and coracobrachialis, supplied by brachial artery and musculocutaneous nerve
what and where is the anterior condylar foramen?
aka hypoglossal canal. at base of skull, just above occipital condyle
what are the strap muscles?
aka infrahyoid muscles; 4 pairs of muscles in anterior neck (sternohyoid, sternothyroid, thyrohyoid and omohyoid).
circuit of papez
aka medial limbic circuit. neural circuit between hippocampus, hypothalamus + limbic lobe, for control of emotional expression/memory
name the two canals which the anterior wall of the tympanic cavity leads to
auditory tube, canal for tensor tympani muscle
2 main components of the external ear
auricle (pinna) and external auditory (acoustic) meatus
what do you call the 6 mesenchymal bumps on pharyngeal arches 1&2 which form the pinna?
auricular hillocks
the tympanic membrane can be examined in clinic using which device
auriscope
efferent lymph vessels carry lymph to what?
away from lymph nodes to greater nodes or veins
where in the limbs are lymph nodes largest and most numerous?
axilla and groin
which nerve wraps around the neck of the humerus?
axillary (labelled C)
what are the contents of the axilla
axillary artery, vein & lymphatics. parts of brachial plexus (wrapped around axillary artery). long thoracic nerve
which nerve/nerve roots supplies deltoid?
axillary nerve, roots C5/6 (posterior cord)
most lymph from the breast goes to which nodes?
axillary nodes
which vein does the brachial vein run into?
axillary vein
the 5 main terminal arm branches of brachial plexus are?
axillary, radial, musculocutaneous, ulnar, median
give an important function of axons aside from AP conduction
axonal transport - passage of substances up and down the microtubules in axons
rhomboid minor
back muscle; connects the scapula with spinal vertebrae. acts with rhomboid major to keep scapula pressed against thoracic wall
as well as the carotid arteries, which arteries supply the head and neck
branches from the subclavian arteries as they pass to the arms; vertebral artery, costo-cervical trunk, internal thoracic, thyrocervical trunk
in which layer of the cerebellar neuron are purkinje cells found?
dendrites (flat, fan shaped) in *molecular layer*, with the parallel fibres. cell bodies in *purkinje cell layer* axons descend down into
premotor
denoting the anterior part of the motor cortex in the frontal lobe of the brain, which is concerned with coordinating voluntary movement
epineurium
dense fibrous layer surrounding bundle of nerve fascicles + their blood vessels
sclera
dense, fibrous outer layer of the whole eyeball. Mostly white but at the front of the eye it is transparent and called the *cornea*
hill-sachs lesion
dent in the posterolateral head of humerus (caused by forceful impact of humeral head against the glenoid rim when shoulder is dislocated anteriorly)
what does superior oblique muscle do
depends where you look; if you look towards your nose, enables you to look down simultaneously. if you look opposite way, it does virtually nothing
trochanteric fossa
depression on posterior femur supero-anterior to the intertrochanteric crest. attaches several muscles
2ndary neurulation
describes process in caudal end of embryo, where neural tube forms by not folding, but hollowing out of the interior of a solid precursor (canalisation)
primary neurulation
describes process in rostral end of embryo, where neural tube is formed by neural plate creasing inward until the edges come in contact and fuse
difference between Pharyngeal Arches, Visceral Arches, and Branchial Arches?
different names for the same thing (depending on species). Humans = pharyngeal arches
which foramen is immediately anterior to foramen spinosum?
foraman ovale
name the largest foramen in the posterior cranial fossa
foramen magnum
what forms the lower margin of the superior orbital fissure?
greater wing of sphenoid
olecranon fossa
groove in the posterior distal humerus; accomodates the tip of the ulna
bicipital groove
groove on anterior humurus separating greater and lesser tubercles. aka intertubercular groove.
raphe
groove, ridge, or seam between two parts in an organ or tissue
deltoid ligament
group of ligaments which holds together the medial ankle joint
hypothenar eminance
group of three muscles of the palm that control the motion of the little finger
difference between haemorrhage and haematoma
haemorrhage = bleeding. haematoma = tumor (lump, mass) of blood
2 most common sutures affected in craniosynostosis
half the time its sagital suture only. a quarter of time its coronal suture only. rare to have multiple sutures close
biceps femoris insertion
head of fibula
if a patient can't pronate their forearm, which nerve is suspected to be injured?
median nerve
which nerve innervates the lower flexor compartment of the forearm?
median nerve (with help from ulnar)
supracondular fracture of humerus usually leads to which characteristic signs and why?
median nerve damage. thenareminance wasting, lack of sensation in areas of hand, extended+supinated forearm (some weak flexion), hand of benediction
what important structure links the brainstem and spinal cord?
medulla
medulla can also be called what?
medulla oblongata
lambda
meeting point of sagittal and lambdoid sutures (back of skull)
ulnar styloid
projection from the medial distal ulnar; descends a little lower than the head
palatine shelves
projections of maxillary prominences which grow medially from below the tongue, to fuse above it with the nasal septum. forms the 2ndary palette
what are articular processes
projections of the vertebra which serve to connect them with adjacent vertebra
soleal line
prominant oblique ridge on upper posterior surface of the tibia.
lateral malleolus
prominence on the outer side of the ankle, formed by the lower end of the fibula
pulvinar
prominence on the posterior part of thalamus, containing the pulvinar nuclei
passavant ridge
prominence on the posterior wall of the nasopharynx formed by contraction of the superior constrictor muscle of the pharynx during swallowing/speech (cuts nasopharynx off from oropharynx)
the supinator muscle is almost the exact opposite of which muscle?
pronator teres
sialogram
radiographic examination of glands. injection of contrast medium into the salivary duct of a single gland, followed by routine X-ray projections
is the radius or the ulna on the 'thumb' side of the forearm?
radius
garrods pads
raised calluses on the dorsal finger joints. indicative of dupuytren's contracture on the palmar side of hand
optic disc
raised disk on the retina at the point of entry of the optic nerve, lacking visual receptors and so creating a blind spot
what does the intralaminar nuclei do?
receives info from brainstem reticular formation; sends many branches all over neocortex and the striatum
what position does serratus anterior have to be in to become an accessory respiratory muscle?
rotating the scapula so the glenoid faces upwards, with fixed pectoral girdle
which types of skull movements occur at the atlanto-axial joints?
rotation of the head and atlas (shaking the head "no")
weakness of shoulder joint is indicative of which disease?
rotator cuff disease
infraspinatus
rotator cuff muscle. occupies chief part of the infraspinatous fossa
deltoid tuberosity
roughened raised area on lateral humerus where deltoid attaches
condyle
round bump on a bone where it forms a joint with another bone
promontory of ear
rounded elevation on the lateral side of the bone of the inner ear, between the oval and round windows. produced by 1st turn of underlying cochloa
lingual tonsil
rounded masses of lymphatic tissue that cover the posterior region of the tongue
where can you palpate your own lingual nerve?
running just under the membrane behind your more posterior teeth, where you can rub the bone
name the 2 backward curves in the spine
sacrum + coccyx kyphosis
name the branches of central artery to retina seen in the fundus of the eye
superior + inferior macular arteries, sup + inf nasal branches (run towards the nose) and sup + inf termporal branch (towards temples)
what are the cornua of the thyroid cartilage?
superior and inferior horn-shaped projections of the posterior thyroid cartilage
pubic rami
superior and inferior; meet at the body of the pubis - border medial quarter of obturator foramen
name the 3 muscles of the pharynx
superior constrictor, middle constrictor, inferior constrictor (posterior view)
name where these muscles attach to the mandible + their function: temporalis, masseter, buccinator, pterygoid muscles
temporalis: attaches onto coronoid process of mandible; draws mandible posteriorly upwards. masseter: inserts onto zygomatic arch, elevates mandible. pterygoid muscles: attach to condyle of mandible, elevates it. buccinator arises from alveolar processes of maxilla/mandible; pulls back mouth
plantaris insertion
tendo calcaneus
gluteus medius insertion
tendon inserts into an oblique ridge that runs downward and forward on the lateral surface of the greater trochanter
gracilis action
adducts thigh, flexes knee joint, medially rotates leg
what 3 things should appear white in the brain on CT?
bone, blood, and calcification
anterior inferior iliac spine
bony eminence just below ASIS
landing hard on a heel is likely to rupture which tendon?
achilles tendon
tendo calcaneus AKA?
achilles tendon
which tendon attaches to posterior calcaneus?
achilles tendon
what are the anterior and posterior boundaries of the spinal canal?
*anterior:* vertebral body + post. longitudinal ligament. *Posterior:* adjacent laminae (vertebral arches) + ligamenta flava
pinna can also be known as?
*auricle*
which bodyparts aside from the cranium are most commonly affected in craniosynostosis
*limbs*, face, hearing
which cells migrate into the embryo head to differentiate into the cranial vault bones?
*mesenchymal cells* from cranial neural crest and occipital somites
striate nucleus is aka?
*neostriatum*, or *striatum*
what are the roots of the brachial plexus?
*ventral rami* of spinal nerves c5-t1
name the joints which fuse the bones of the pelvis
2 sacro-iliac joints and pubic symphisis
thyroid gland rests anteriorly over which tracheal rings?
2,3,4
what is the minimum number of neurons which synapse in the somatosensory pathway from peripheral receptor to cerebral cortex?
3
cerebellar peduncles
3 pairs of fibre bundles which connect the cerebellum to the brain stem; information passes on these tracts in both directions.
name the cartilagenous plates the chondrocranium is derived from
3 pairs of plates; the prechordal, hypophyseal and parachordal cartilages.
what are the nasal meatuses?
3 passages of nasal cavity; superior, middle, and inferior meatus, located beneath each of the corresponding nasal conchae (pic = coronal plane)
at which age is cleft lip usually surgically corrected?
3-8 months
what % of cleft palate cases are associated with cleft lip?
50%
sartorius origin
ASIS
inferior gluteal line
bony line from ASIS to middle of sciatic notch. gluteus minimus originates above it
name the 3 layers of meninges covering brain + spinal cord
dura mater, arachnoid mater, pia mater
name the ligaments which turn the sciatic notches into foramina
sacrospinous and sacrotuberous ligaments
what is the overal function of the medial thigh muscles?
adduct the hip joint (and slight medial rotation of femur at hip joint)
which G protein is the target of cholera toxin
Gs (activates adenylate cyclase)
nerve supply of psoas major
L2 + L3 (small direct branches of lumbar plexus)
root of femoral nerve
L2 - L4
root of obturator nerve
L2 - L4
flexion of hip is supplied by which nerve root?
L2 L3
root of of sciatic nerve
L4 - S3
extension of hip is supplied by which myotome?
L4 L5
which nerve root supplies sensation to webbed space between big toe and 2nd toe?
L5
describe the motor loss in median nerve damage
LOAF: Lateral 2 lumbricals, can't Oppose thumb, loose foreArm pronation and wrist Flexion
which is the most posterior of the adductor thigh muscles?
adductor magnus
name an AMPAR antagonist
NBQX
piriformis origin
sacrum (2nd 3rd 4th segments) + upper border of sciatic notch
name the small projection just superior to the medial epicondyle of femur
adductor tubercle
what shape is the origin of the deltoid from above?
U shaped from lateral clavicle, across acromion and onto spine of scapula
which causes muscle weakness WITH *vivid* reflexes, an upper or lower motoneuron lesion? why?
UMN lesion. causes a lack of descending inhibition: the corticospinal tract is glutamatergic, and excites both excitatory and inhibitory interneurons. There are more inhibitory than excitatory neurons in the spinal cord, and so if there is a loss of input, there will be a net increase in levels of excitation
what is the origin of the tibial collateral ligament
adductor tubercle of femur
what movement does the latissimus dorsi allow when it contracts?
adducts and medially rotates the humerus (eg enables climbing/doing pull ups)
adductor brevis action
adducts thigh
which structures are contained in bicipital groove?
a branch of the anterior humeral circumflex artery, and tendons of long head of biceps, pectoralis major and teres major
what usually seperates the tendons of sartorius, gracilis, and semitendinosus from the tibial collateral ligament?
a bursa
internal auditory meatus
a canal in the petrous temporal bone. carries nerves from inside skull towards middle + inner ear, namely cranial nerves VII and VIII
barbiturates
a class of sedative and sleep-inducing drugs (CNS depressants) derived from barbituric acid; GABA receptor agonists
what is volkmann's contracture caused by?
a compartment syndrome; obstruction of brachial artery (fracture/tourniquet/plaster cast) near the elbow causes ischaemia/necrosis of muscles of forearm - so they shorten to length of contraction
valgus
a deformity involving oblique displacement of part of a limb away from the midline
articularis genu
a few muscular fibres of the vastus intermedius which insert into upper limit of suprapatellar bursa. help prevent pinching of the bursa into the knee joint
what would you expect to cause midline swellings in the neck which move up and down during swallowing (are *fluctuant*)?
a goitre or a thyroid cyst
vallecula
a groove or furrow, eg the epiglottic vallecula, the space between the epiglottis and the back of the tongue
vestibule
a large entrance or reception room/ a chamber, channel or cavity
long term potentiation
a long-lasting signal transmission enhancement between two neurons that results from stimulating them synchronously
what is the name for a ganglion *within the CNS*
a nucleus
what is the lateral border of the anatomical snuffbox?
a pair of parallel and intimate tendons, of the extensor pollicis brevis and the abductor pollicis longus
confluence
a place where two rivers meet; a process of merging
what can sometimes form instead of a nose in conditions like holoprosencephaly?
a proboscis
somatosense
a sensation (eg pressure, pain, or warmth) that can occur anywhere in the body, unlike one localized at a sense organ (eg sight, balance, or taste)
subchondral sclerosis
a sign of arthritis. thickening/hardening of bone just beneath the joint cartilage (body's compensation for cartilage erosion)
the cricoid cartilage is likened to the shape of what?
a signet ring, with the narrow part in front and thick section behind
labrum
a structure corresponding to a lip, eg the 'lip' of fibrocartilage surrounding glenoid cavity
lamina
a thin plate or layer
dysplasia
abnormal development (of organs or cells)
paresthesia
abnormal sensation, typically tingling or pricking ("pins and needles"), caused chiefly by pressure on or damage to peripheral nerves
dyskinesia
abnormality or impairment of voluntary movement
at what level do the common carotid arteries divide into internal + external?
about the level of the voicebox
where is subclavian pulse palpable
above and behind the middle of clavicle
superior thyroid notch
above the laryngeal prominence the thyroid cartilage laminae are separated by a V-shaped notch
what layer covers the deep fascia of the thigh?
an outer sleeve of subcutaneous fat
polycystic kidney disease is associated with what in the head and neck?
aneurysms (especially in the circle of willis)
knee valgus angle
angle between femur and tibia
angle of inclination
angle between neck and shaft of femur
coxa vara
angle of inclination is deminise to >116 degrees
coxa valga
angle of inclination is increased to over 140 degrees
which artery do you feel as a pulse medial to your orbit?
angular artery
what is scientific name for 'loss of smell'
anosmosia
prosencephalon
another term for forebrain (the anterior part of brain)
antebrachium
another word for forearm
medial antebrachial vein
anteior central vein of the forearm, which drains venous plexus of palm into the basilic or median cubital veins
in the neck, neurovascular structures and lymph lie laterally to which compartment; anterior or posterior?
anterior
what is the most common direction of shoulder dislocation?
anterior
name the two major compartments in neck + their key contents
anterior (trachea, oesophagus, thyroid gland, neurovascular structures), posterior (cervical vertebral column + its surrounding musculature)
vastus intermedius origin
anterior + lateral femur
as it leaves the cavernus sinus, the internal carotid branches to form what?
anterior + middle cerebral arteries, posterior communicating artery and opthalmic artery
which ligament prevents slipping of the femur backwards on the tibia during extension of knee eg when walking?
anterior cruciate ligament
which nerve runs up through the cribiform plate?
anterior ethmoidal nerve
what movements can the deltoid induce?
anterior fibres alone can flex the arm and posterior fibres extend it. the middle fibres abduct the arm
is primary curvature of the spine anterior or posterior flexure?
anterior flexure
which nerve supplies the deep anterior muscles of the forearm?
anterior interosseus branch of median nerve (and ulnar nerve for half of flexor digitorum profundus)
vastus medialis origin
anterior intertrochanteric line, linea aspera + medial epicodylar line
location of glenohumeral ligament
anterior of shoulder joint, running from glenoid to anatomical neck
which region of the nose do most nosebleeds come from in young kids? how should you treat this?
anterior region of nasal septum - known as Little's area. Pinch nose + ask to lean forward
scalenous anterior arises from which tubercles on vertebrae?
anterior tubercles of transverse processes of third, fourth, fifth, and sixth cervical vertebrae
parts of cerebellum
anterior, posterior and flocculonodular lobes. vermis (a narrow midline ridge like a worm), hemisphere (lateral part), tonsil
does the coracoid process project anteriorly or posteriorly?
anteriorly
the shafts of the tibia and fibula are covered by muscles - except for where?
antero-medial aspect of tibia (lies directly beneath skin from knee to ankle)
looking through an auriscope, which quadrant of the tympanic membrane will you see a reflected cone of light?
anteroinferior quadrant
non-genetic risk factors of NTDs
anticonvulsant drugs, deficiency of folate/inostiol/vit B12/zinc, fever during pregnancy, diabetes/obesity, folate antagonists (fumonisin/trimethoprim)
if you look a skull in the eye, how can you identify the greater and lesser wing of sphenoid?
anything below the superior orbital fissure is greater, anything above it is lesser
where can thyroid cysts occur?
anywhere along the developmental path of migration of thyroid gland
where are the apical groups of axillary lymph nodes?
apex of the axilla, near where the clavicle runs over the
what is the visible/palpable part of the axilla called?
the floor
rhomboid major
back muscle; connects the scapula with spinal vertebrae. acts with rhomboid minor to keep scapula pressed against thoracic wall
occiput
back part of skull
teres minor
back/shoulder muscle involved in LATERAL rotation and stabilisation of shoulder
teres major
back/shoulder muscle involved in MEDIAL rotation, adduction and stabilisation of shoulder
the vertebral arteries join within the cranium to form which artery?
basilar artery
what are the parts of the pons?
basilar pons (the ventral portion) and pontine tegmentum (dorsal portion)
name a vein on medial side of arm that passes through the superficial and deep fascia to join veins beside the brachial artery
basilic vein
why might certain stains colour the white matter of the spinal cord dark?
because a traditional way of staining spinal cord sections is to stain the myelin
why is the mastoid antrum clinically important?
because of the possibility of spread of infection into it from middle ear
why are microglia sometimes called a 'fake' glia?
because they don't develop in the CNS (instead related to immune cells) but migrate their during development + take up permanent residence
how does the thickness of the ulna change distally?
becomes narrower distally
how does the thickness of the radius change distally?
becomes thicker distally
where does lymph drain to in scalp infections?
behind ear, side of mandible, and under chin
where does the short saphenous vein begin?
behind the lateral malleolus
where does the cephalic vein drain into the axillary vein?
below the coracoid process, in the delto-pectoral groove (label D in picture)
where can you palpate the anterior cricoid cartilage?
below the thyroid cartilage
where would you find the radial nerve if you opened the posterior proximal arm?
between medial and lateral head of triceps
where do the ventral rami for the brachial plexus emerge?
between the scalenus anterior and medius in the neck
name the muscles of the posterior compartment of thigh
biceps femoris, semitendinosous, semimembranosus
name the hamstring muscles (posterior thigh)
biceps femoris, semitendinosus, semimembranosus
middle meningeal artery
big branch of the external carotid/maxillary artery behind jaw. runs through foramen spinosum to act as nutrient artery to skull vault bones
how do P2X adenosine receptors block pain?
blocks receptor for ATP on microglia - this prevents the microglia releasing BDNF.
gracilis origin
body + inferior ramus of pubis
3 main parts of sphenoid bone
body, greater wings, lesser wings
what does high FGF activity induce in the cranial sutures?
bone differentiation
sesamoid bone
bone embedded within a tendon or a muscle, formed by strain, acts like a pulley for tendons to slide over
innominate bone
bone formed from the fusion of the ilium, ischium, and pubis; the hipbone
malleus
bone in the middle ear that transmits vibrations of the eardrum to the incus
the two main sources of lymphocytes of the blood
bone marrow and lymph nodes
medial wall of middle ear
bone of inner ear, including the promontory + oval and round windows
maxilla
bone of upper jaw, part of the nose and eye socket
cervical plexus contains ventral rami from which vertebrae?
c1-4
what spinal levels are the origin of musculocutaneous nerve?
c5 and c6
which ventral rami form upper trunk of brachial plexus
c5-6
brachial plexus contains ventral rami from which vertebrae?
c5-T1
which cervical vertebra doesn't have a bifidous spinous process
c7
which ventral rami form middle trunk of brachial plexus
c7
which ventral rami form lower trunk of brachial plexus
c8-t1
salivary calculi
calcified masses (stones) found in salivary glands due to infection, dehydration, hypercalcaemia in that area
how does your feeling of pain change after a prefrontal lobotomy?
can still feel pain, but won't appreciate it/it won't worry you: *pain is a construct of cerebral cortex*
which is more superior, auditory tube or canal for tensor tympani muscle
canal for tensor tympani muscle
patella retinacula
capsule-strengthening layers either side of the extensor apparatus, formed from fascia lata and fibrous expansions from vastus lateralis + medialis
what may be suspected from finding a hard lump in the axilla?
carcinoma of the breast
name the bulge at the bottom of the internal carotid artery (where is branches from common carotid)
carotid sinus
efferent nerve fibres
carry impulses out of the CNS
larynx
cartilagenous structure/*valve* which protects the entrance to the airway, also involved in phonation (aka the voice box).
what articulates with the deep surface of the patella?
catilage in the midline on the femur, and a crescentic area of catilage on the medial femoral condyle
orbit
cavity in the skull that contains the eye; the eye socket
are microglia motile cells?
cell bodies are stationary, but processes are constantly moving; Surveillance (resting) mode.
mesenchyme
cells (mainly mesodermal) which are loosely near to each other, are fairly motile, and develop into connective/ skeletal tissues
repair scwhann cellsn
cells which form from normal schwann cells (both myelinating and non myelinating) when their axons die. they alone are able to regenerate nerves
what is the only artery to supply the retina?
central artery to the retina
from which neural tube vesicle do the cerebral hemispheres grow?
the forebrain vesicle
what nerve gives sensory innervation to the skin above the medial hallux and lateral first toe
deep peroneal
extensor digitorum longus nerve supply
deep peroneal nerve
extensor hallucis longus nerve supply
deep peroneal nerve
peroneus tertius nerve supply
deep peroneal nerve
tibialis anterior nerve supply
deep peroneal nerve
where does the external carotid artery divide into its two terminal branches?
deep to the mandible, anterior to the ear, within the parotid salivary gland
nasal hemianopia
defective vision in medial half of visual field, i.e. the half nearer the nose. caused by pressure to one side of optic chiasma. can affect one eye or both (binasal)
dysmetria
deficiences in gaging movement distance
posterior triangle of neck
defined by trapezius, sternocleidomastoid, and clavicle
ethmoid bone
delicate bone at root of nose, full of air, with many perforations through which the olfactory nerves pass
which muscle abducts the arm from 15° to 90°
deltoid
which muscles are supplied by axillary nerve?
deltoid and teres minor
name the roughened raised area about a third the way down the lateral humerus
deltoid tuberosity
parietal spiders
diploic veins which can look like spiders in the parietal region
location of hypoglossal canals
directly superior and slightly anterior to each corresponding occipital condyle
carpal tunnel syndrome
discomfort + weakness in the thumb and first 2 fingers due to compression of median nerve as it passes over carpal bones
instability of the shoulder joint leads to what?
dislocations
how does the obturator artery divide?
divides into anterior and posterior branches which form arterial mesh on obturator membrane. posterior division gives branch to acetabulum
what begins to happen to the mastoid process in 2 year olds?
doesn't yet exist; begins to develop, and air cells gradually extend into it
what causes craniosynostosis?
dominant gene mutations in FIbroblast Growth Factors (FGF) receptors which *increase FGF receptor activity* driving the formation of bone in cranial sutures
when discussing the foot, which term can be used instead of superior?
dorsal
when discussing the hand, which term can be used instead of posterior?
dorsal
tibialis anterior action
dorsiflexes ankle + inverts foot
which nucleus of the thalamus relays info from the amygdala to the prefrontal cortex?
dorsomedial nucleus (seen in pic of thalamus from above)
in the anatomical postition, do the pronator muscles run diagonally downwards in medial or lateral direction?
down and lateral
what causes acromioclavicular joint separation?
downward force being applied to the superior part of the acromion, either by something striking the top of the acromion or by falling directly on it
features of thoracic vertebrae
downward pointing spinous process, rib facets found on transverse processes + vertebral bodies, coronally orientated joint facets
sulcus sign
downwards traction is applied to the humerus. If the space widens between the acromion process and humeral head to produce a sulcus, instability is confirmed.
CSF rhinorrhea
drainage of CSF through the nose; sign of dangerous basal skull fracture
median aperture
drains cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from the fourth ventricle into the subarachnoid space/cisterna magna
lactiferous duct
ducts which carry milk from each lobe in the breast to a *lactiferous sinus* in the nipple
pathology of concussion
due to the stretching of the brainstem caused by movements of the brain during impact on the head. brainstem may stop consciousness
motor nerve fibres
efferent fibres which carry impulses to muscles for contraction
crura cerebri
either of two symmetrical tracts of nerve fibers at the base of the midbrain, linking the pons and the cerebral hemispheres (aka cerebral peduncles)
the auricle is made from what?
elastic fibrocartilaginous framework with skin firmly attached
ultimobranchial body
embryological structure that gives rise to the calcitonin-producing cells— parafollicular cells aka C cells—of thyroid gland. derivative of the ventral recess of the fourth pharyngeal pouch
quinsey
emergency complication of tonsillitis. a abscess of pus beside the tonsil in the peritonsillar space - can obstruct airway
annular ligament
encircles the head of the radius, and retains it in contact with the radial notch of the ulna. part of the proximal radioulnar joint
pretrachial fascia
encloses most of the anterior compartment of the neck
which is the more ancient way of producing bone, endochondral or intramembranous ossification?
endochondral
describe the course of the ulnar nerve in the hand
enters palm through Guyon's canal going just lateral to pisiform. splits in two: a superfical branch splits off to palmaris brevis + palmar digital nerves to last two fingers. deep branch innervates the 3 hypothenar muscles, medial 2 lumbricals, all the interossei, adductor pollicis + deep head of flexor pollicis brevis
contents of spinal canal
epidural fat pad (with internal venous plexus), meninges, and spinal cord itself
what is the scientific word for bleeding from the nose?
epistaxis
conjunctiva
epithelial mucous membrane that covers sclera and lines the inside of the eyelids
name the tube which runs from the anterior middle ear to the back of the nose
eustachian tube
other names for the auditory tube
eustacian or pharyngotypanic tube
peroneus tertius action
everts foot, dorsiflexes ankle
peroneus brevis action
everts foot, plantarflexes ankle
why is too much glutamate in neurons dangerous?
excitotoxicity - enables Ca2+ to build up in cell, which inactivates proteins, leading to cell death + neurodegeneration
describe the passage of lymph
exits blood capillary walls, supplies tissues, drained by lymph capillaries, into lymph vessels, primary lymph node, vessels to 2ndary then tertiary lymph node, enters great veins in neck
the common peroneal nerve exits the popliteal fossa in which direction? what does it meet?
exits it laterally to meet and curl around (anteriorly) the neck of the fibula
frontonasal prominence
expansive facial process in the embryo that develops into the forehead and bridge of the nose
what is the major function of the muscles on the front of the thigh?
extend the knee joint
sacrospinous ligament
extends from ischial spine to lateral margins of the sacrum, deep to the sacrotuberous ligament
extensor hallucis longus action
extends great toe, dorsiflexes ankle
extensor digitorum longus action
extends interphalangeal + metatarsophalangeal joints of toes. dorsiflexes foot
to where does the greater wing of sphenoid extend?
extends laterally to contribute to a piece of the wall of the cranium
vastus intermedius action
extends the leg
vastus medialis action
extends the leg
tentorium cerebelli
extension of the dura mater that separates the cerebellum from the inferior portion of the occipital lobes
which is stronger, the flexor or extensor muscles of the neck? why?
extensor -because the head naturally falls forwards onto chest when upright, so they have to combat this
what forms from the 1st pharyngeal cleft?
external auditory tube
the lower extemity of the breast lies on the origin of which muscle?
external oblique
which name is also used for the lateral pterygoid muscle?
external pterygoid
is middle meningeal artery subdural or extradural?
extradural (hence rupture causes extradural haemorrhage)
calcific tendonitis
extremely painful. deposits of calcium apatite in a tendon (ommonly tendons of the rotator cuff)
how is the cranial dura attached to the periosteum of the vault?
extremely strongly; completely fused wherever the dura is directly in contact (though not at sinuses or places where dura folds into fibrous brain septa)
what are the two sets of muscles of the tongue
extrinsic (have origin from bone) and intrinsic (have no bony origin/attachment)
which nerve supplies stapedius muscle
facial nerve (VII)
functions of cranial nerve VII
facial nerve: facial sensation/expression, blinking, smiling, frowning, taste, lacrimation and salivation
what causes cleft lip?
failure of maxillary prominances to fuse with intermaxillary processes - due to genetics/smoking/phenytoin (used to treat epilepsy)
is the maxilla a strong or weak bone? why?
fairly frail, as most of its inside is excavated by the large maxillary air sinus (maxillary antrum)
each muscle group that surrounds the cervical vertebral column is covered with....?
fascia
what strengthens the anterior knee joint capsule either side of the extensor apparatus?
fascia lata and fibrous expansions from vastus lateralis + medialis; the *patella retinacula*
if you press a cyst, does it feel hard or soft?
feels squashy/fluid filled, like a sack
is cleft palate more common in males or females?
females
posterior divisions of nerves from L2-4 become which nerve?
femoral
pectineus nerve supply
femoral (occasionally obturator) nerve
which artery passes through the adductor hiatus to enter the popliteal fossa?
femoral artery, turning into the popliteal artery as it does so
what does the femoral sheath contain?
femoral artery, vein, lymphatics, canal (NOT NERVE)
sartorius nerve supply
femoral nerve
what is the nerve supply of the quadriceps group of muscles?
femoral nerve
which nerve supplies sartorius muscle
femoral nerve
rectus femoris nerve supply
femoral nerve (L2,3,4)
vastus lateralis nerve supply
femoral nerve (L2,3,4)
vastus medialis nerve supply
femoral nerve (L2,3,4)
name the two openings in the bony medial wall of the middle ear
fenestra vestibuli (oval window) and festra cochleae (round window)
the external auditory meatus + external tympanic membrane have sensory innervation from which nerves?
fibres from vagus and trigeminal
what are intervertebral discs made from?
fibrocartilage which attaches firmly to the vertebra above nad below
quadrangular membrane
fibroelastic membrane running between the anterolateral aspects of the epiglottis, anteriorly down to the thyroid laminae / posteriorly down to arytenoid cartilages
distall tibiofibular joint is what kind of joint?
fibrous
what kind of joints are sutures?
fibrous
what joins the two origins of the soleus muscle?
fibrous arch
ligamentum patellae
fibrous band in knee, running over the patella and down onto the tuberosity of the tibia, forming part of the extensor apparatus
iliotibial tract
fibrous band/reinforcement of the fascia lata on lateral side. runs from iliac tubercle to tibia/patella. aka iliotibial band
long plantar ligament
fibrous bundle on base of foot, from calcaneus posterior tubercle to heads of the central 3 metatarsals
radial groove
oblique depression, on posterior humeus, for the radial nerve + deep brachial artery
anatomical neck of humerus
oblique groove; divides the head of humerus from the tuberosities, gives attachment to the articular capsule
anatomical neck of humerous
oblique ring surrounding the head of humerous
anterior divisions of nerves from L2-4 become which nerve?
obturator
which muscle in medial (adductor) compartment of thigh has no adducting action?
obturator externus
obturator externus origin
obturator membrane (medial half outer surface) + adjacent pubis + ischium (lower part of obturator foramen)
adductor brevis nerve supply
obturator nerve
most adductors of the hip joint are supplied by which nerve
obturator nerve
what is the nerve supply of the medial thigh muscles?
obturator nerve EXCEPT pectineus (femoral nerve)
nerve supply obturator externus
obturator nerve L2,3,4
nerve supply adductor longus
obturator nerve anterior division (L2,3,4)
nerve supply adductor magnus
obturator nerve posterior division. small posterior part of muscle supplied by sciatic nerve
the principal bones which form the cranium
occipital bone, parietal bones, temporal bones, sphenoid bones, frontal bone
lambdoid suture is continuous with which suture
occipitomastoid suture
what is the time difference for fusion of the palatine shelves between male and female embryos
occurs 1 week earlier in males
how would you test cranial nerve III
oculomotor nerve: ask subject to look side to side, then look up and down with eye in medial, then lateral position
describe cranial nerve III
oculomotor nerve; supplies all but *3* extrinsic eye muscles. passes from anterior midbrain, between posterior + superior cerebral arteries, to enter cleft of dura between free edge of tentorium/over petroclinoid ligament. runs lateral wall cavernous sinus through superior orbital fissure into orbit
odontoid peg
odontoid process; toothlike projection from the C2 vertebra on which the first vertebra pivots
ethmoid bone is formed by fusion of prechondral cartilages and what?
olfactory capsules
describe cranial nerve I
olfactory nerve; considered an extension of the brain. from the olfactory bulb, ~20 nerve bundles pass through cribiform plate to innervate upper nasal cavity
where are the superior orbital fissures located from the intercranial view?
on either side between the greater and lesser wings of sphenoid bone. lateral to the anterior clinoid processes of the sella turcica
where can you observe the hypothalamus on a brain?
on the base, between the optic chiasm and cerebral peduncles
contralateral
on the opposite side of the body
ipsilateral
on the same side of the body
when and where do the secondary curvatures of the spine develop?
one in cervical region as children begin to hold their head up. one in lumbar region as children learn to balance on their feet
name the thick, internal portion of the temporal bone
petrous part
which bone contains the organs of hearing/balance within its substance
petrous temporal
fractures involving which bone can easily injure the organs of hearing/balance
petrous temporal bone
which bone forms the structure of the bony labyrinth
petrous temporal bone (labyrinth is 'excavated' out of it
ectoderm + endoderm form what inbetween each pharyngeal arch?
pharyngeal clefts (ectoderm) and pharyngeal pouches (endoderm)
which nerves supply the pharynx?
pharyngeal plexus (mixing of nerves from the vagus, glossopharygeal, accessory CNs and sympathetic fibres)
which meningeal layer covers the surface of the CNS?
pia mater
what does the posterior division of obturator nerve do?
pierces obturator externus to lie between middle + deep strata of adductor muscles (supplies ob. externus + adductor magnus)
inferior and superior nerves are separated either side of which muscle?
piriformis
which muscle passes through the greater sciatic foramen?
piriformis
name the muscles of the deep group of gluteal region
piriformis, gamellus superior, obturator internus, gamellus inferior, quadratus femorus
sella turcica is another name for
pituitary fossa (because supposedly turkish saddle shaped?!)
adduction of foot
pivot toes inwards
abduction of foot
pivot toes outwards
which pathway is essential to begin closure of the neural tube?
planar cell polarity signalling
acromioclavicular joint
plane synovial joint at top of shoulder
pharyngeal tubercle
point of attachment of the superior pharyngeal constrictor and its raphe on the inferior surface of the basilar part of the occipital bone
asterion
point on exposed skull, just behind ear, at the junction of the lamboid, occipitomastoid, and squamosal sutures
ischial spine
pointed projection from the posterior border of body of ischium, just below the greater sciatic notch and above lesser sciatic notch
which part of the cerebellum influences the ventrolateral nucleus of thalamus (& hence M1 + PMC)?
pontocerebellum
what is the deepest structure of the popliteal fossa?
popliteal artery
name the neurovascular structures of popliteal fossa from medial to lateral
popliteal artery, popliteal vein, tibial nerve, common peroneal nerve
insertion popliteus
popliteal line on posterior tibia
name the small muscle in the region of the soleal line
popliteus
which muscle enables the unlocking of the knee from the close packed position? how?
popliteus muscle. it laterally rotates femur on the tibia
axillary tail of the breast
portion of the breast that extends into the arm-pit. Tenderness here without any other breast soreness indicates ovulation
which cords of the brachial plexus are destined to supply extensors?
posterior cord
which intercranial fossa does the hypoglossal canal open into?
posterior cranial fossa
which ligament prevents slipping of the femur forwards on the tibia, for example when weight bearing on a flexed knee?
posterior cruciate ligament
name the thickening produced by the expansion of semimembranosis at the back of the knee joint capsule
posterior oblique ligament
which bones form the posterior cranial fossa?
posterior of both petrous temporal bones, occipital bone
internal acoustic meatus is a foramen located in which bone? which part?
posterior part of petrous temporal bone
what is the mastoid antrum related to medially?
posterior semicircular canal. pic is superior view
the 3 muscles of the posterior thigh run down to the knee in a 'gutter' formed by what?
posterior surface of adductor magnus (medially) and lateral intermuscular septum (laterally)
which structures form the extensor apparatus of the knee
quadriceps, patella, and ligamentum patellae
zygomatic bone
quadrilateral bone; forms the prominence of the cheek, the lateral wall and margin of the orbit, and the anterior zygomatic arch
which nerve would be most at risk of damage from a midshaft humeral fracture?
radial
which should be lower/more distal on the wrist, the radial or ulnar styloid process?
radial
name the 3 ligaments which reinforce the elbow joint
radial + ulnar collateral ligament, annular ligament
where is the origin of the cephalic vein?
radial border of the dorsal venous network of the hand
which nerve supplies extensor muscles all the way down the arm
radial nerve
which nerve supplies virtually all of the posterior upper limb?
radial nerve
treacher collins syndrome
rare autosomal dominant disease affecting tissues from pharyngeal arches 1&2; downward slanting eyelids, hypoplasia of mandible, cheekbones, ear, sparse eyelashes, high/cleft palate. intelligence unaffected
bifid nose
rare birth defect caused by incomplete fusion of medial nasal prominences. may show as notched/divided nasal tip, deficit in midline frontal bone, broad nasion, wide-spaced eyes
frey's syndrome
rare neurological disorder. caused by parasympathetic nerve damage to/near parotid glands / from damage to facial nerve often from surgery. flushed + sweating area due to abnormal parasympathetic regrowth
which muscle flexes the hip and extends the knee?
rectus femoris
which nerve supplies nearly all of the larynx?
recurrent laryngeal nerves
crural
relating the leg from the knee to the foot
'volar' means what?
relating to palm of hand or sole of foot
thenar
relating to the ball of the thumb
peroneal
relating to the fibula or the outer part of the leg below the knee
what does 'coxal' mean?
relating to the hip
pollicis
relating to the thumb
when sphincter muscles within ciliary body contract, what happens?
relaxes suspensory ligaments, lens assumes globular shape
why do damaged sensory neurons cause pain?
release neuregulin
which sides of the brain innervate which eye?
right and left sides of the brain *each* give branches to both eyes (hence upper motoneuron lesions you can usually still control both eyes)
common tendinous ring
ring of fibrous tissue surrounding the optic nerve at its entrance at the apex of the orbit; origin for the rectus muscles
palate
roof of the mouth; separates the oral and nasal cavities
name the squiggly 'lines of fusion' between the bones of the cranium
sutures
meningism
symptom triad of nuchal rigidity (neck stiffness), photophobia (intolerance of bright light) and headache. may or may not involve the actual meningeal inflammation
proximal tibiofibular joint is what kind of joint?
synovial
TCN joint
talocalcaneonavicular joint. synovial ball and socket joint for the rounded head of the talus. socket is formed by posterior navicular surface, anterior articular surface of the calcaneus, and upper surface of the calcaneonavicular (spring) ligament
jugular foramen lies between which two bones
temporal and occipital
petrous temporal bone helps support which brain lobe?
temporal lobes
which part of the rotator cuff is most often damaged in a rotator cuff tear?
tendon of supraspinatus, where it inserts onto the greater tubercle humeral head
what is the medial border of the anatomical snuffbox?
tendon of the extensor pollicis longus
what fills the anterior gap in the fibrous capsule of the knee joint
tendon of the quadriceps, patella, and ligamentum patellae
tensor fasciae latae action
tenses iliotibial tract; pulls it superior + anteriorly (locks knee). helps flex, abduct and medially + laterally rotate thigh
which superficial gluteal region muscles are innervated by the superior gluteal nerve?
tensor fasciae latae and gluteus medius + minimus
what forms a tent roof over the posterior cranial fossa?
tentorium cerebelli
what separates the occipital lobe from the cerebellum?
tentorium cerebelli
aside from genetic defects, what can easily kill neural crest cells?
teratogens (eg alcohol)
which is more inferior, teres minor or major?
teres major
extensor hallucis longus insertion
terminal phalanyx, great toe
name the division between the anterior 2/3rds of tongue and the posterior 1/3
terminal sulcus of tongue
allen's test
test for poor hand circulation - colour should return in 5 -15 seconds. if result *negative* then the ulnar artery supply to the hand is not sufficient, so radial artery cannot be safely pricked/cannulated
how can you test cranial nerve IV
test trochlear nerve by asking patient to look towards their nose + then downwards (tests superior oblique muscle)
are the jawbones part of the neurocranium or viscerocranium?
textbooks may say either; however their origin is more similar to the neurocranium
what is the largest component of the diencephalon?
thalamus
why are the 3 cords of the brachial plexus called the lateral, medial and posterior?
that is how they are arranged around the axillary artery
head of humerous
the 'ball' of the ball and socket joint in the shoulder
which nerve supplies obturator internus?
the 'nerve to obturator internus' (NOT obturator nerve)
ischial tuberosity
the 'sit bones'. posterior inferior part of ischium; attaches many muscles
name the two bony ridges which extend from the greater and lesser tubercles of the humerus
the *crests* of the greater and lesser tubercles
scientifically, what is the adams apple?
the *laryngeal prominence* formed by the angle of meeting point of the two laminae of the thyroid cartilage
which part of the sphenoid is the foramen spinosum located on?
the *spine* of the sphenoid (on the greater wing)
what articulates with the lateral end of the clavicle?
the acromion
which structures divide the thigh into flexor and extensor compartments?
the adductor mass (which form a thick muscular septum). the shaft of femur. the lateral intermuscular septum (sheet of fascia). *together these 3 form a musculo-osseofascial partition across thigh*
what is the wing of the ilium known as?
the ala of iliump
what do the pharyngeal arch *cartilages* form into?
the alisphenoid (a small bone of the orbit), elements of the jaw skeleton (Meckel's cartilage), Maleus, Incus, Stapes, and the hyoid and laryngeal skeleton
free edge of tentorium
the anterior U shaped border of tentorium cerebri
what forms the medial cord of the brachial plexus?
the anterior division of the lower trunk
what forms the lateral cord of the brachial plexus?
the anterior divisions of of the upper trunk and middle trunk
name the joints which connect the atlas vertebra with the bones above and below it
the atlanto-occipital joints and the atlanto-axial joints
which vertebrae are not connected by inter-vertebral discs?
the atlas and axis. (synovial joints instead for greater movement)
basioccipital
the basilar process of the occipital bone. runs from in front of foramen magnum to join the sphenoid
what should you palpate for to easily find the brachial artery (eg for taking blood presure)?
the biceps tendon, solid when elbow is flexed (artery is immediately medial to it)
squamous part of temporal bone
the biggest, superior part of temporal bone
why is the ethmoid easily fractured?
the bone is very frail like eggshell
mandible
the bone that is hinged to open the mouth; the lower jaw
malleoli
the bony prominences either side of the ankle
limbus
the border/margin of a structure, especially the junction of the cornea and sclera in the eye
what is the mastoid antrum related to superiorly?
the brain
most cranial nerves come from what part of the brain?
the brainstem
why is more lymph produced in active/inflamed tissues?
the capillary endothelium becomes excessively permeable
which is more sharply curved, the cornea or the sclera?
the cornea (it bulges forwards)
why do babies show a positive babinski sign?
the corticospinal pathways are not fully myelinated until age 1-2 yrs, so the reflex is not inhibited by the cerebral cortex
mesenchymal cells from neural crest+occipital somites become *interposed between surface ectoderm + neural ectoderm* to form what?
the cranial vault bones
what attaches the lower border of the thyroid cartilage to the cricoid in the midline?
the cricothyroid ligament
what lies inferior to the slit-like gap below the vestibular ligament?
the cricovocal membrane
name the bone in front of the calcaneus
the cuboid bone
upper lateral cutaneous nerve of the arm
the cutaneous branch of the axillary nerve, supplying skin over the deltoid
what lies beneath the superficial fascia?
the deep fascia
what does the 'base' of the breast rest on?
the deep fascia of pec major
where does the serratus anterior arise from?
the digitations of muscle arise from the front of first 8 ribs
a fracture at which end of the humerus is most dangerous to the radial nerve? why?
the distal third. the nerve is much tighter and less mobile here than it is up higher.
the *aditus* connects the anterior wall of the mastoid antrum with what?
the epitympanic recess
what do the dorsal rami supply?
the erector spinae muscles + their overlying skin (segmental supply)
what does the linea aspera divide into superiorly?
the spiral line medially, and the gluteal tuberosity laterally
why doesn't the 5th pharyngeal arch form?
the structure it forms in fish isn't present in humans
what is the proximal border of the anatomical snuffbox?
the styloid process of the radius
name the two bony prominances either side of the wrist
the styloid processes of the ulna and radius
posterior to the temporal styloid process, the facial nerve passes through which passage?
the stylomastoid foramen
what attaches to the pharyngeal tubercle?
the superior constrictor muscle
petrous crest
the superior margin of the petrous part of temporal bone. runs obliquely
name the membrane which covers tendons and secretes synovial fluid
the synovium / synovial sheath
the condyle of the mandible articulates to what?
the temporal underside surface of the zygomatic arch
what 2 key structures help form the arches of the foot?
the tendons of TD&H muscles, and the ligaments within the foot
the semitendinosus insertion lies behind the insertions of which 2 muscles?
the tendons of gracilis and sartorius
what is the innervation of the hamstrings?
the tibial part of sciatic nerve EXCEPT short head of biceps (fibular nerve)
cauda equina
the true spinal cord has ended at L2, but nerves still branch down (like a horses tail) and come out at different levels
pterygoid plates
the two legs of each right and left pterygoid process of the sphenoid bone
where do the arytenoid cartilages attach to the larynx? by what kind of joint?
the upper border of the lamina of the cricoid cartilage. synovial joint
what surrounds the cranial cavity?
the vault bones (at sides + above) and cranial base bones (below)
which veins form the popliteal vein?
the venae comitantes of the tibial arteries (anterior and posterior), the short saphenous vein (comes from the lateral leg)
which part of cerebellum controls adjusting ongoing movement of the whole body?
the vermis + pars intermedia
the body and arch of a vertebra enclose which hole?
the vertebral foramen
lymph passes out of what to get into the tissues?
the walls of blood capillaries
what are the anterior and posterior cruciate ligaments named after?
their origin on the *tibia*
how do glial cells in the brain control blood flow?
their processes cover synapses and blood vessels. v. active synapses are detected by astrocyte, which releases glial-derived signalling molecules, causing vasodilation of nearby vessel
flexor pollicis brevis
thenar muscle in anterior hand which flexes the thumb
abductor pollicis brevis
thenar muscle in hand which abducts the thumb
name an antagonist CNS neurotransmitter
there are inhibitors, but no antagonists
name the vessels within the cornea
there are no blood vessels/lymphatics
name the branches of the internal carotid artery
there are none - first branches arise inside the skull
viewing a tibia bone from above, how can you tell which is the anterior side?
there is a triangular point - because of the tibial tuberosity - on the anterior surface (at the bottom of this photo)
why are there so many alternative routes for blood (anastomoses) around the shoulder joint?
there is so much movement in that joint that often muscles may compress arteries in certain postures - provides alternative routes
why are fibres from the septal nuclei to the hippocampus important?
they are cholinergic (help speed up processing) so if damaged, they will have detrimental affect on memory
how do dural venous sinuses differ from veins?
they are lined only with endothelium, not a full set of vessel layers (e.g. tunica media). also lack valves
what clinical problems do Lumbar Ribs cause?
they are small + don't usually cause any dangerous symptoms
can ligaments contract and flex?
they can stretch to a limit but not actively contract like muscle
after being released as a neurotransmitter, how can peptides be recycled?
they can't - must be remade in presynaptic neuron
how do granule cells exist in the molecular layer of cerebellum?
they disperse into parallel fibres
why is the laryngeal prominence larger in men?
they have larger voiceboxes; at puberty the angle between the laminae of the thyroid cartilage becomes much more acute for men as their voices deepen)
simply put, why are the lower vertebrae more stout than the upper?
they have more weight to bear
why don't pharyngeal cartilages contribute much to the fetal/adult head?
they've been replaced in human evolution by membrane bones
which bones articulate with the maxilla?
zygomatic bone, sphenoid bone
how many turns does the cochlea have
~2.75 turns
what value should the angle of femoral torsion be?
~20°