Chapter 1 PP Flashcards

1
Q

intermediate

A

-between a superficial and deep structure
-bicep is intermediate between the skin and the humerus

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2
Q

transverse

A

axial

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3
Q

palmar vs dorsal

A

-palmar surface- anterior -> skin ligaments are short, stout, abundant
-dorsal surface- dorsum- posterior (back of hand) -> skin ligaments are long and sparse

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4
Q

plantar vs dorsal

A

-plantar surface- inferior foot (sole)
-dorsal surface- dorsum- superior

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5
Q

inversion vs eversion

A

-

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5
Q

supination vs pronation

A

-supination- return to anatomical position
-pronation- flip away from anatomical position

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6
Q

tension lines

A

-cleavage lines
-keep skin taut yet allow for creasing with movement
-lacerations or incisions made parallel the tension lines heal well with little scarring due to minimal disruption of collagen fibers
-cut made across will disrupt collagen fibers -> gape and heal with keloid scarring
-surgeons make incisions parallel unless adequate exposure, avoiding nerves etc. is to be considered

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7
Q

stretch marks in skin

A

-collagen and elastic fibers form tough flexible meshwork of tissue
-if skin is stretched too much or rapidly -> damage to collagen fibers
-bands of wrinkled skin initially red, become purple, and later white
-abdomen, buttocks, thighs, breasts

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8
Q

burns

A

-tissue injury to thermal, electrical, radioactive, chemical agents
-superficial burns- limited to superficial part of epidermis
-partial thickness burn- damage to epidermis into superficial part of dermis -> hair and sweat glands are not damaged and can contribute to replacements cells for basal layer of epidermis
-full thickness burn- entire epidermis and dermis and perhaps muscle > require skin grafting
-total body surface affected is more significant than degree (depth) generally

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9
Q

heterotopic bone

A

-bone forms in soft tissue not normally present
-due to chronic muscle strain -> small hemorrhagic areas undergo calcification and ossification
-common in horse riders thighs or buttocks

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10
Q

bone adaptation

A

-bones are living organs
-blood vessels, lymphatic vessels, nerves, disease
-unused bone (paralysis) -> atrophy -> can decrease in size
-bone may be absorbed
-hypertrophy (enlargement) when increased weight to support for long period
-mandible atrophys when teeth are extracted

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11
Q

bone trauma and repair

A

-broken ends of bone must be brought together to normal position -> reduces fracture
-fibroblasts proliferate and secrete collagen that forms collar of callus to hold bones together
-callus calcifies to remodel
-callus is resorbed and replaced by bone

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12
Q

degeneration- osteoporosis

A

-organic and inorganic components of bone decrease
-abnormal reduction in quantity of bone or atrophy
-brittle
-lose elasticity

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13
Q

femur

A

-transverse sections of femur show trabeculae
-trabeculae is in spongy bone
-tension and pressure lines
-related to weight bearing function of femur

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14
Q

bony markings

A

appear wherever tendons, ligaments, and fascia are attached or where arteries lie adjacent to or enter bones
-condyle
-crest
-epicondyle
-facet
-foramen
-fossa
-line (linea)
-malleolus
-botch
-process
-protuberance
-spine
-trochanter
-tubercle
-tuberosity

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15
Q

development and growth of long bone

A

-primary ossification center- bone tissue it forms replaces most of the cartilage in the shaft of the bone model
-shaft of bone ossified -> diaphysis
-secondary ossification center- appear in other parts of the developing bone after birth
-parts ossified from here -> epiphyses
-Growth occurs on both sides of the epiphysial plates

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16
Q

vasculature and innervation of long bone

A

-receive blood from articular arteries that arise from vessels around joint
-anastomose (communicate) to form networks to ensure continuous blood supply throughout its range of movement
-articular veins located in joint capsules mostly synovial membrane
-rich nerve supply
-in distal parts of limbs, articular nerves are branches of cutaneous nerves supplying overlying skin
-nerves that supply muscles supply and move joints
-many pain fibers in fibrous layer of joint capsule
-joints transmit proprioception

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17
Q

accessory bone

A

-supernumerary bones
-develop when additional ossification centers appear and form extra bones
-majority of bones form from several centers of ossification and separate parts will fuse
-sometimes centers fail to fuse -> gives appearance of extra bone
-extra bone is just a missing part of main bone
-common in foot and calvarium

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18
Q

assessment of bone age

A

-knowledge of where ossification sites are, time of their appearance, rate at which they grow, time of fusion (synostosis) of the sites -> determines age
-clinical med, forensic science, anthropology
-1. appearance of calcified material in diaphysis and/or epiphyses
-2. disappearance of dark line representing the epiphysial plate (fusion has occurred)
-fusion occurs 1-2 years earlier in girls than boys
-bone age can be determined by radiographic study of ossification center of hand

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19
Q

displacement and separation of epiphyses

A

-displacement of an epiphysis upon injury in child (adult -> fracture)
-displaced epiphyseal plate can be mistaken for fracture without imaging
-separation of epiphyseal plate can be misinterpreted as displaced piece of fracture bone
-sharp
-uneven edges

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20
Q

avascular necrosis

A

-loss of blood supply to epiphysis or other part of bone -> death of tissue
-after every fracture small areas of adjacent bone undergo necrosis
-large fragments in some fractures

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21
Q

degenerative joint disease

A

-breakdown of joint space
-synovial joints can withstand wear but heavy use over many years (synovial fluid) -> degenerative changes
-aging of articular cartilage occurs on the ends of the articulating bones
-usually knee, hip, vertebral column, hands (weight bearing)
-irreversible
-articular cartilage becoming less effective as shock absorber and more vulnerable to repeat fracture/friction during joint movement
-osteoarthritis
-stiffness, discomfort, pain

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22
Q

synovial joints

A

-cavity
-contains a small amount of synovial fluid
-nourishing articular cartilage and lubricating joint surfaces
-most common
-reinforced by accessory ligaments that either separate (extrinsic) or are thickened part of the joint capsule (Intrinsic)
-some have fibrocartilaginous articular discs or menisci present when the articulating surfaces of the bones are incongruous
-6 types classified by shape of the articulating surface and/or type of movement they permit

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23
Q

6 types of synovial joints

A

-pivot- uniaxial, rounded process fits into bony ligamentous socket -> rotation- ex. median atlantoaxial joint
-ball and socket- multiaxial, rounded head fits into concavity- ex. hip joint
-condyloid- biaxial, permit flexion, extension, abduction, adduction, circumduction- ex. metacarpophalangeal joint
-saddle- biaxial- ex. carpometacarpal joint
-hinge- uniaxial, permit flexion and extension- ex. elbow
-plane- usually uniaxial, gliding or sliding- ex. acromioclavicular joint

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24
Q

motor unit

A

-structural unit of a muscle - muscle fiber
-motor units with more fibers -> less precise
-actin (thinm and myosin (thick) filaments are contractile (myofibrils) in muscle fibers

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25
Q

muscle testing

A

-helps diagnose nerve injuries
-gauge power of person’s movement
-Usually tested in bilateral pairs for comparison
-2 methods:
-1. movement performed that resists movement produced by examiner (active). —ex. person flexes forearm while the examiner resists the effort - testing flexion
-examiner performs movements against resistance produced by the person
-ex. person keeps the forearm flexed while the examiner attempts to extend it

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26
Q

electromyography

A

-electrical recording of muscles via EMG
-tests muscle action
-surface electrodes placed over muscle
-amplifies and records differences in electrical action potentials
-resting shows baseline activity (tonus) -> only disappears during sleep, paralysis, anesthesia
-contracting muscles show variable peaks of phasic activity
-analyzes individual muscle during different movements
-can be part of treatment for restoring action of muscles

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27
Q

muscular atrophy

A

-wasting of muscular tissue (atrophy)
-may result from primary disorder of muscle or from lesion of nerve
-may be caused by prolonged immobilization of limb -> cast, sling

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28
Q

compensatory hypertrophy and myocardial infarction

A

-compensatory hypertrophy- myocardium responds to increasing demands by increasing size of fibers (cells)
-cardiac fibers damaged during heart attack are necrotic -> scar tissue develops into myocardial infarction (MI), an area of myocardial necrosis
-smooth muscle cells can undergo compensatory hypertrophy in response to high demands -> smooth muscle cells in walls of uterus increase in size (hypertrophy) and number (hyperplasia) for pregnant women

29
Q

large elastic arteries

A

-conducting arteries
-aorta and its branches
-elasticity in these arteries maintains blood pressure
-allows to expand when heart contracts and return to normal between contractions

30
Q

medium muscular arteries

A

-distributing arteries
-walls are mainly smooth muscle circularly arranged
-femoral artery
-decrease their diameter (vasoconstrict) -> regulates flow of blood to different parts of body as required

31
Q

small arteries/arterioles

A

-narrow lumina
-thick muscular walls
-degree of arterial pressure is mainly regulated by degree of tonus (firmness) in smooth muscle of arteriolar walls
-if tonus in arteriolar wall is above normal -> hypertension

32
Q

anastomoses, collateral, circulation, and terminal (end) arteries

A

-anastomoses (communicating connections) between branches of an artery provide many potential detours for blood flow in the case of obstruction by compression, position of joint, pathology, surgical ligation
-if main channel is blocked -> smaller channels increase in size -> provide collateral circulation -> ensures blood supply to structures distal to blockage
-collateral circulation takes time to develop and usually insufficient for sudden occlusion or ligation
-terminal (end) arteries- do not anastomose with adjacent arteries
-occlusion of terminal artery cuts off supply to organ or structure completely
-functional terminal arteries- arteries with ineffectual anastomoses supply segments of brain, liver, kidney, spleen, intestines

33
Q

arteriosclerosis: ischemia and infarction

A

-most common disease of arteries- arteriosclerosis (hardening)
-atherosclerosis- group of diseases characterized by thickening and loss of elasticity
-aTHerosclerosis- form of arteriosclerosis- buildup of fat (cholesterol/plaque) in arterial walls
-Ca deposits then form atheromatous plaque -> narrowing ->
-thrombosis- formation of clot can occlude artery or by flushed into blood stream -> ischemia
-ischemia- reduction of blood supply to organ or region -> infarction - death
-thrombus can cause myocardial infarction, stroke, gangrene

34
Q

varicose veins

A

-walls of veins lose elasticity or deep fascia becomes incompetent in sustaining musculovenous pump
-weak
-dilate under the pressure of supporting column of blood against gravity -> pooling
-swollen, twisted veins
-legs usually
-incompetent due to dilation or rotation and no longer function properly
-hx of DVT -> higher risk
-gaiters area- venous disease - pooling, ulcers etc -> itching

35
Q

venous blood return to heart

A

-vascular sheath- accompanying veins (to arteries) surround arteries in a branching network
-veins are stretched and flattened as the artery expands during contractions of heart -> Assists in venous blood return
-Musculovenous pump- skeletal muscles compress deep veins -> milking blood superiorly towards heart
-multiple perforating veins penetrate deep fascia to shunt blood to deep veins and assist in venous return

36
Q

lymphoid system

A

-lymph enters lymphatic trunks -> trunks unite to form right lymphatic duct or thoracic duct
-right lymphatic duct- drain lymph from bodys right upper quad (right head, neck, thorax, right upper limbs)
-thoracic duct- drains lymph from remainder of body
-lymph flows from extracellular space through lymph node

37
Q

motor unit

A

-motor unit- motor neuron + muscle fibers it controls

38
Q

myelinated nerve fibers

A

-neurolemma has a myelin sheath
-consists of continuous series of schwann cells enwrapping an individual axon
-myelin sheath gaps- nodes of ranvier- intervals in the myelin sheath where short parts of the axon are not covered by myelin

39
Q

unmyelinated nerve fibers

A

-neurolemma consists of multiple axons separately embedded within the cytoplasm of each schwann cell
-schwann cells do not produce myelin
-most fibers in cutaneous nerves (skin) are unmyelinated

40
Q

lymphangitis, lymphadenitis, lymphedema

A

-lymphangeittis and lymphandenitis- secondary inflammation of lymphatic vessels and lymph nodes
-may occur when the lymphatic system is involved in the metastasis of cancer -> lymphogenous dissemination of cancer cells
-lymphedema - the accumulation of interstitial fluid that occurs when lymph is not drained from an area
-when cancerous lymph nodes are removed from axilla -> lymphedema of upper lime may result

41
Q

damage to central nervous system

A

-when CNS is damaged injured axons do not recover usually
-proximal stumps begin to regenerate -> sending sprouts into area of the lesion -> however ->
-growth is blocked by astrocyte (type of glial cell) proliferation at the site of injury
-results in permanent disability when there is destruction of a tract in CNS

42
Q

peripheral nerve degeneration

A

-when peripheral nerves are crushed/severed -> their axons degenerate distal to the lesion bc they depend on cell bodies for survival
-crushing nerve injury- the nerve cell bodies survive and the connective tissue coverings of the the nerve are intact
-intact connective tissue sheaths guide the growing axons to their destinations -> no surgical intervention for crushing nerve
-cut nerves require surgery bc regeneration of axons requires apposition of the cut ends by suture through the epineurium -> individual fascicles are realigned
-compromising blood supply to nerve for long period by compression of vasa nervorum-> ischemia -> nerve degeneration
-prolonged ischemia -> severe damage similar to crushing or cutting nerve

43
Q

arrangement and ensheathment of peripheral nerve fibers

A

-endoneurium and neurolemma surround the axons -> bundled by perineurium -> bundled by epineurium

44
Q

dermatome

A

-unilateral area of skin innervated by the general sensory fibers of single spinal nerve
-unilateral area of skin

45
Q

myotomes

A

-unilateral muscle mass receiving innervation from somatic motor fibers conveyed by a spinal nerve
-grouped by joint movement to facilitate clinical testing
-unilateral portion of skeletal muscle

46
Q

visceral motor innervation

A

-ANS
-efferent nerve fibers and ganglia of the ANS are organized into 2 divisions:
-1. sympathetic (thoracolumbar) division
-2. parasympathetic (craniosacral) division
-divisions innervate same structures with opposite effect
-impulses from CNS involve 2 neurons in both sympathetic and parasympathetic
-location of the presynaptic cell bodies and which nerves conduct the presynaptic fibers from the CNS -> distinguish symp from para

47
Q

somatic motor/sensory

A

-CNS and PNS
-innervate all parts of body except the viscera in the body cavities, smooth muscle, and glands
-somatic motor- supplies skeletal (voluntary)
-somatic sensory- carries sensation like touch, pain, temperature, and position from skin, muscles, joints

48
Q

intermediolateral cell columns

A

-presynaptic neurons are in the intermediolateral cell columns (IMLs) or nuclei of the spinal cord- lateral horns
-paired IMLs are part of gray matter between T1-L2+L3
-postsynaptic cell bodies occur in 2 places: paravertebral and prevertebral ganglia
-axons of presynaptic neurons leave spinal cord through anterior roots and enter anterior rami of spinal nerves T1-L2+L3
-after entering rami presynaptic sympathetic fibers leave anterior rami and pass to sympathetic trunks through white rami communicates

49
Q

paravertebral ganglia

A

-form right and left sympathetic trunks (chains) on each side of vertebral column that extends the length of the column
-superior cervical ganglion- superior paravertebral ganglion lies at the base of cranium
-ganglion impar- forms inferiorly where 2 trunks unite at level of coccyx

50
Q

prevertebral ganglia

A

-in the plexuses that surround origins of main branches of abdominal aorta

51
Q

postsynaptic sympathetic fibers

A

-outnumber presynaptic fibers
-those in neck, body wall, limbs, pass from paravertebral ganglia of sympathetic trunks to adjacent anterior rami of spinal nerves through gray rami communicantes
-enter all branches of each of the 31 pairs of spinal nerves including posterior rami to stimulate contraction of blood vessels and arrector muscles
-Postsynaptic sympathetic fibers that perform these functions in the head have their cell bodies in the superior cervical ganglion at the superior end of the sympathetic trunk -> pass from ganglion by means of a cephalic arterial branch -> form periarterial plexuses of nerves -> follows branches of the carotid arteries or pass to CNs to reach their destination in the head
-components of all branches of all spinal nerves -> innervate all bodys blood vessels, sweat glands, arrector, visceral structure

52
Q

suprarenal (adrenal) gland

A

-suprarenal medullary cells function as special type of postsynaptic neuron that release neurotransmitters into bloodstream to circulate throughout body producing widespread sympathetic response
-(rather than release onto the cells of specific effector organ)

53
Q

parasympathetic visceral motor innervation

A

-presynaptic are located in 2 sites: cranial and sacral site
-cranial site- from the gray matter of brainstem, fibers exit CNS within CN 3, 7, 9, 10 -> cranial parasympathetic outflow
-sacral site- from gray matter of sacral segments of the spinal cord (S2-S4), the fibers exit CNS through anterior roots of spinal nerves S2-S4 and the pelvic splanchnic nerves that arise from anterior rami -> sacral parasympathetic outflow
-weaker than sympathetic -> only head, visceral cavities of trunk, and erectile tissues of genitalia

54
Q

computerized tomography (CT)

A

-transverse
-beam of x-rays passed through body
-amount of radiation absorbed by diff types of tissue varies with fat, bone, and water
-angiography
-3D CT volume reconstruction

55
Q

ultrasonography

A

-visualization of superficial or deep structure in body
-records pulses of ultrasonic waves reflecting off tissues
-can be viewed in real time
-standard method from embryo and fetus bc no radiation

56
Q

magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)

A

-better for tissue differentiation
-reconstruct the tissue in ANY PLANE (diff from CT)
-magnetic field
-body pulsed with radio waves
-signal emitted from pts tissues are stored in computer
-can vary by controlling how radiofrequency pulses are sent and received
-scanners can be gated or paced to see blood in real time
-MR angiography and venography use MRI and dyes to image blood vessels
-MR spectroscopy- investigate metabolic changes in brain after stroke, tumor, etc.

57
Q

positron emission tomography (PET)

A

-uses cyclotron produced isotopes of extremely short half life that emit positrons
-evaluate physiological functions of organs
-areas of increased brain activity will show selective uptake of injected isotope

57
Q

eversion vs inversion

A

-eversion- outside part of foot up
-inversion part of the foot up

58
Q

dorsiflexion vs plantar flexion

A

-dorsiflexion- toes up
-plantarflexion- tip toes

59
Q

opposition vs reposition

A

-opposition- thumb + pinky
-reposition- thumb moves away from pinky

60
Q

retrusion vs protrusion

A

-retrusion- jaw in
-protrusion- jaw out

61
Q

lateral flexion

A

-lateral bending
-sway side to side

62
Q

abduction, adduction, extension, flexion of the thumb

A

-abduction- thumb moves anteriorly
-adduction- thumb moves posterior back into anatomical
-extension- thumb separates
-flexion- thumb bends towards pinky

63
Q

protraction vs retraction

A

protraction- shoulder forward
-retraction- shoulder backward

64
Q

poor blood supply to bones

A

-bones with poor blood supply -> takes longer to heal or wont heal -> avascular necrosis
-bone becomes necrotic
-common in hips
-femur head has singular blood supply -> if that is disrupted -> possible necrosis -> femoral head collapse

65
Q

compartment system

A

-fascia surrounds muscles -> keeps together
-fascial space allow muscles to glide
-scarring -> adhesion of muscles ->pain
-fascia doesnt allow for a lot of swelling -> compartment syndrome- injury to muscle that causes swelling and increases pressure -> occludes vessels and nerves -> necrosis
-fasciotomy- opens the fascia and lets swelling decrease -> reclose

66
Q

coronary bypass

A

-use veins to reprofuse
-bypass arteries that have been occluded
-flip the vein so valves dont resist or remove valves
-pulmonic arteries have valves

67
Q

deep vein thrombosis

A

-DVT
-pulmonary embolism- travels to lung
-blood clot in deep vein (usually leg)
-if you have a hole in your heart -> venous thrombosis can cross over and cause a stroke -> uncommon

68
Q

thrombic emboli

A

-blood pools in heart when they have art
fibrillation -> coagulates -> thrombosis
-plaques break off -> stroke