ABDOMINAL CAVITY · Rectus sheath Strong, incomplete fibrous compartment of the rectus abdominis...
Transcript of ABDOMINAL CAVITY · Rectus sheath Strong, incomplete fibrous compartment of the rectus abdominis...
ABDOMINAL CAVITY
the first lecture
Abdominal cavity
Body walls
Rectus sheath
Inguinal canal
Sites of hernias
Arteries and veins of abdominal walls
Planes and regions
Abdominal cavityThe major part of theabdominopelvic cavity
Between the thoracicdiaphragm and thesuperior pelvic aperture(pelvic inlet)
The space which issurrounded by multilayered abdominalwalls
The location of the most digestive organs, thespleen, kidneys and ureters (partially)
Abdominal cavity
Extends superiorly
into the
osteocartilaginous
thoracic cage to the
4th intercostal space
and inferiorly to the
pelvic cavity (pelvic
inlet)
The posterior wall
includes lumbar
vertebrae and
intervertebral discs
Abdominal cavity
The spleen and the liver
are protected by
the thoracic cage
Part of ileum,
cecum and sigmoid
colon are protected
and supported by
the greater pelvis
Abdominal cavity
Part of kidneys
are protected by
the thoracic cage
Subdivision of the abdominal wall
Anterolateral wall:
-anterior wall
-right and left lateral
walls
During physical
examination is inspected,
palpated, percussed and
auscultated
Posterior wall
Abdominal anterolateral wall
Skin
Superficial fascia:
Camper’s (fatty) layer
Scarpa’s (membranous) layer
Muscles
Deep fascia
Transversalis fascia
Endoabdominal
(extraperitoneal) fat
Parietal peritoneum
Muscles of the anterolateral abdominal wall
Flat muscles:
External oblique
Internal oblique
Transverse abdominal
Vertical muscles:
Rectus abdominis
Pyramidalis
External oblique muscle
The largest and the most
superficial of the three
flat muscles
Muscle fibers run
inferomedially and
become aponeurotic,
form a rectus sheath
Extends from external
surfaces of 5th-12th ribs
to linea alba, pubic
tubercle and iliac crest
External oblique muscle
Rotates the trunk to the
opposite side and bends
the trunk to the same
side (unilateral action)
Flexes the trunk and
compresses and
supports abdominal
viscera (bilateral action)
External oblique muscle
Innervation:
thoracoabdominal
nerves (ventral rami
of inferior 5 thoracic
nerves)
subcostal nerve
Internal oblique muscle
Intermediate of the three flat
muscles
Aponeurotic fibers form a
rectus sheath
The superior 2/3 of
aponeurosis splits into two
laminae
Extends from thoracolumbar
fascia, iliac crest and inguinal
ligament to inferior borders of
10th-12th ribs, linea alba and
pecten pubis
Internal oblique muscle
Bends and rotates the trunk to
the same side (unilateral
action)
Flexes the trunk and
compresses and supports
abdominal viscera (bilateral
action)
Internal oblique muscle
Innervation:
thoracoabdominal
nerves (ventral rami of inferior six thoracic nerves)
iliohypogastric and ilioinguinal nerves: terminal branches of the anterior ramus of first spinal lumbar nerve
Transverse abdominal muscle
The innermost muscle
Fibers run more or less
transversomedially and
form the rectus sheath
Extends from internal
surfaces of 7th-12th
costal cartilagines,
thoracolumbar fascia,
iliac crest, inguinal
ligament to linea alba
pubic crest and pecten
pubis
Transverse abdominal muscle
Compresses and supports
abdominal viscera (bilateral
action)
Transverse abdominal muscle
Innervation:
thoracoabdominal nerves (ventral rami of inferior six thoracic)
iliohypogastric and ilioinguinal nerves: terminal branches of the anterior ramus of first spinal lumbar nerve
Rectus abdominis muscle
Principal vertical muscle
Paired rectus muscles-separated
by the linea alba
Enclosed in the rectus sheath
(most of the rectus)
Anchored transversely by
tendinous intersections
Extends from pubic symphysis,
pubic crest to xiphoid process
and 5th-7th costal cartilages
Flexes trunk and compresses
abdominal viscera
Rectus abdominis muscle
Innervation:
thoracoabdominal
nerves (ventral rami of
inferior six thoracic)
Pyramidalis muscle
Absent in approximately 20%
of people
Located in the rectus sheath
anterior to the most inferior
part of the rectus abdominis
muscle
Extends from the pubic crest
of the hip bone to the linea
alba
Draws down on the linea alba
(tenses the linea alba)
The attachment is a
landmark for an accurate
median abdominal incision
Dermatomes
Function and action of the anterolateral abdominal muscles
Form a strong expandable support for the anterolateral abdominal wall
Protect the abdominal viscera frominjury
Compress the abdominal contents
Help to maintain or increase the intra-abdominal pressure oppose thediaphragm (produce expiration and produce the force required for defecation, vomiting, micturition and parturition-maternal pushing duringchildbirth)
Move the trunk and help to maintainposture
Rectus sheath
Strong, incomplete fibrous
compartment of the rectus
abdominis and pyramidalis
muscles
Formed by the aponeuroses
of the flat muscles
Has anterior and posterior
layers
The arcuate line demarcates
the transition between the
aponeurotic posterior wall of
the sheath and the
transversalis fascia
Rectus sheath above arcuate line
Anterior layer:
-aponeurosis of external oblique muscle
-anterior lamina of the
internal oblique
aponeurosis
Posterior layer:
-posterior lamina of the internal oblique aponeurosis
-aponeurosis of transverse abdominal muscle
Rectus sheath below arcuate line
Anterior layer:
-aponeurosis of external
oblique muscle
-aponeurosis of internal
oblique muscle
-aponeurosis of transverse
abdominal muscle
Posterior layer: ABSENT!!!
Rectus abdominis muscle
lies on transversalis fascia
Linea alba
Fibrous band
Runs vertically the
entire lenght of the
anterior abdominal wall
from the xiphoid
process to the pubic
symphysis
Narrow inferior to the
umbilicus and wide
superior to it
Contains umbilical ring
(the fetal umbilical
vessels pass to and
from the umbilical cord
and placenta)
Linea alba
Formed by the fibers
of the anterior and
posterior layers of the
sheath
peritoneal fold and peritoneal recess
Peritoneal fold- a reflection
of peritoneum that is raised
from the body wall by
underlying blood vessels,
ducts and obliterated fetal
vessels
Peritoneal recess (fossa)-
a pouch of peritoneum that
is formed by a peritoneal
fold
Internal surface of the anterolateral wall:
Internal surface of the anterolateral wall- peritoneal folds
Umbilical peritoneal
folds:
-the median umbilical fold
(covers the median
umbilical ligament- the
remnant of urachus, in
fetus runs within the
umbilical cord)
-two medial umbilical
folds (cover the medial
umbilical ligaments- the
remnants of the
occluded fetal umbilical
arteries)
-two lateral umbilical
folds
(cover the inferior
epigastric vessels)
Internal surface of the anterolateral wall – peritoneal
recessesPeritoneal fossae (depressionslateral to the umbilical folds):
-supravesical fossae
-medial inguinal fossae (calledinguinal triangles)
-lateral inguinal fossae
(include the deep inguinal
rings)
The fossae are potential sites for hernias
The falciform ligament:
a sagittally oriented peritonealreflection in the supraumbilicalpart of the internal surface
Inferior epigastric artery
Inguinal canalOblique, inferomedially
directed passage through
the inferior part of the
anterolateral abdominal
wall
Approximately 4 cm long
Has an opening at each
end:
- the deep (internal)
inguinal ring
- the superficial (external)
inguinal ring
The deep (internal) inguinal ring
The site of an outpouching of the transversalis fascia
The beginning of an evagination in the transversalis fascia
Forming an opening through which spermatic cord or round ligament of the uterus pass to enter the inguinal canal
The transversalis fascia continues into the canal and forms the innermost covering (internal fascia) of the structures traversing the canal
The superficial (external) inguinal ring
An opening between the diagonal fibers of the aponeurosis of the external oblique
Exit from inguinal canal
The margins:
-lateral crus
-medial crus
-intercrural fibers (superior
crus)- form the arch
-reflected inguinal ligament
(posterior and inferior
crus)
The inguinal canalHas two walls and roof and floor
formed by:
aponeurosis of the external
oblique (anterior wall)
transversalis fascia (posterior
wall)
fibers of the internal oblique and
transverse abdominal muscles
(roof)
superior surface of the inguinal
ligament (floor)
The inguinal ligament (Poupart)
Fibrous band
Extends between the anterior
superior iliac spine and the
pubic tubercle
Forms the floor of the inguinal
canal
Some fibers form the
reflected inguinal ligament
(pass upward to cross the
linea alba and blend with the
lower fibers of the
contralateral aponeurosis)
The main contents of the inguinal canal
in the female and the male
The femoral canalThe smallest of the threefemoral sheath compartments
Short, approximately 1.25 cm
The base of its (abdominalend) is directed superiorly and although oval shaped is calledthe femoral ring
Extends distally to the level of the proximal edge of thesaphenous opening
Allows the femoral vein to expand
Contains loose connectivetissue, fat, lymphatic vesselsand a deep inguinal lymphnode
Abdominal herniasHernia= „rupture”
The result from increasedintra-abdominal pressure inthe presence of weakness
The protrusion of parietalperitoneum through an anatomical opening or a secondary defect
Hernial opening- the orifice ordefect
The hernial sac- the pouch, generally lined by parietalperitoneum
Hernial contents- usuallyconsist of greater omentumor loops of small bowel
Indirect inguinal hernias
Pass through the deep inguinal
ring (it is lateral to the inferior
epigastric artery) with the sac
following the course of the
spermatic cord
Strikes the pad of the finger
Direct inguinal hernias
Bulge directly through the
abdominal wall, medial to
the inferior epigastric artery
Strikes the distal tip of the
finger during palpation from
the scrotum
The „three finger rule”
Usefull to appreciate
the topographic
anatomy of inguinal or
femoral hernias and
differentiate among
direct and indirect
inguinal hernias and
femoral hernias
The examiner places
thenar eminence on the
anterior superior iliac
spine- fingers point to
hernias
Posterior abdominal wall
Five lumbar vertebrae and IV discs
Posterior abdominal wall muscles
Lumbar plexus
Fascia, including thoracolumbar fascia
Diaphragm
Fat, nerves, vessels and lymph nodes
Thoracolumbar fascia
The lumbar part is
extending between
the 12th rib and the
iliac crest
Attaches laterally to
the internal oblique
and transverse
abdominal muscles
Main muscles of the posterior abdominal wall
Psoas major
Iliacus
Quadratus lumborum
Quadratus lumborum muscle
Extends from the medialhalf of the inferior border of 12th rib and tips of lumbartransverse processes
to the iliolumbar ligament
and internal lip of iliac crest
Extends and laterally flexesvertebral column, fixes 12th rib during inspiration
Quadratus lumborum muscle
The subcostal nerve
runs inferolaterally on it
Branches of the lumbar
plexus run inferiorly on
the anterior surface
Ventral branches of
T12 and L1-L4 nerves
supply it
Arteries of the anterolateral abdominal wall
Superior epigastrics from the
internal thoracic arteries
Inferior epigastrics and deep
circumflex iliacs from external
iliac arteries
Superficial circumflex iliacs
and superficial epigastrics
from the femoral artery
Branches of the posterior
intercostal arteries
Branches of the
musculophrenic arteries
(from internal thoracic
arteries)
Inferior epigastric artery
Regions and quadrants of the abdomen
Useful for describing
the location of
abdominal organs
or pain
Regions and planes of abdomen
Four quadrants are
defined by two planes:
Horizontal
(transumbilical)
passing through the
umbilicus and the IV disc
between L3 and L4
vertebrae
Vertical (median)
passing longitudinally
through the body
Regions and planes of the abdomen
Nine regions are
defined by four planes:
Subcostal
passing through the inferior
border of the 10th costal
cartilage on each side
Transtubercular
passing through the iliac
tubercules and the body of
L5 vertebra
Two midclavicular
passing from midpoint of the
clavicles to the midinguinal points
Abdominal regions
Right hypochondriac
Epigastric
Left hypochondriac
Right lateral
Umbilical
Left lateral
Right inguinal
Hypogastric (pubic)
Left inguinal
Transpyloric plane:
- midway between the jugular notch of the sternum and the superior borderof the pubic symphysis
- at the level of the L1 vertebra
- the pylorus is generally locatedslightly below this plane
Semilunar line
Tip of 9th
costal cartilage
to the pubic
tubercle
The digestive tract
Extends from the lips to
the anus.
Consists of oral cavity,
pharynx, esophagus,
stomach, small
intestine and large
intestine.
Associated organs:
liver and pancreas
(major glands of the
digestive tract)
The viscera of the abdomen in situ
The viscera of the abdomen in situ
Projection of anatomical structures onto vertebral column
T7 superior border of the liver
T12 aortic hiatus
L1 transpyloric plane
gallblader (fundus)
renal hilum of left kidney
superior part of duodenum
pancreas (neck)
origin of celiac trunk and SMA
transverse mesocolon (attachment)
L1/L2 origin of the renal arteries
L2 duodenojejunal flexure
renal hilum of right kidney
L3 origin of the inferior mesenteric artery
L3/L4 umbilicus
L4 aortic bifurcation
L5 origin of the inferior vena cava from the
common iliac veins
S3 upper (cranial) border of the rectum
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