Thorax 4 Flashcards

(50 cards)

1
Q

What are vital organs of respiration?

A

lungs

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2
Q

main function of the lungs is to ______ the blood by bringing inspired air into close relation with the venous blood in the pulmonary capillaries.

A

oxygenate

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3
Q

Although cadaveric lungs may be shrunken, firm or hard to the touch, and discolored in appearance, healthy lungs in living people are normally light, soft, and spongy, and fully occupy the _______

A

pulmonary cavities.

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4
Q

Lungs are also elastic and _____ to approximately one third their size when the thoracic cavity is opened.

A

recoil

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5
Q

The lungs are separated from each other by the ___, to which they are attached by the roots of the lungs - that is, the bronchi (and associated bronchial vessels), pulmonary arteries, superior and inferior pulmonary veins, the pulmonary plexuses of nerves (sympathetic, parasympathetic, and visceral afferent fibers), and lymphatic vessels.

A

mediastinum

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6
Q

If the root is sectioned before the (medial to) branching of the main (primary) bronchus and pulmonary artery, its general arrangement is:
________, superiormost on left (the superior lobar bronchus may be superiormost on the right).

A

Pulmonary artery

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7
Q

After pulmonary artery in the arrangement of the lung:

Superior and inferior _____, anteriormost and inferiormost, respectively.

A

pulmonary veins

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8
Q

After pulmonary arteries and pulmonary veins, general arrangement of the lung:
____, against and approximately in the middle of the posterior boundary, with the bronchial vessels immediately surrounding.

A

Bronchus

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9
Q

What artery carries deoxygenated blood?

A

pulmonary artery

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10
Q

In the _____ veins, deoxygenated blood is coming from the blood tissue.

A

Bronchial veins

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11
Q

Medial to the hilum, the root is enclosed within the area of continuity between the parietal and the visceral layers of _____ - the pleural sleeve, or mesopneumonium (mesentery of the lung).

A

Pleura

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12
Q

The ______ of the lung is a wedge-shaped area of the medial surface of each lung, the point at which the structures forming the root enter and leave the lung

A

hilum

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13
Q

Visceral pleura becomes the _______.

A

parietal pleura

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14
Q

_______ = pleural sleeve in the area. Should be folding which is called the pleural sleeve. Hilum of the lung

A

Pleural fold

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15
Q

The _____ and ______ fissures divide the lungs into lobes.

A

horizontal, oblique

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16
Q

The right lung has how many lobes?

A

3

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17
Q

The left lung has how many lobes?

A

2

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18
Q

The right lung is larger and heavier than the left, but it is shorter and wider because the right dome of the diaphragm is higher and the heart and pericardium bulge more to the ______.

A

left

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19
Q

The anterior border of the right lung is relatively _____, whereas this border of the left lung has a deep cardiac notch, an indentation consequent to the deviation of the apex of the heart to the left side.

A

straight

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20
Q

The deep cardiac ______ primarily indents the anteroinferior aspect of the superior lobe of the left lung.

A

notch

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21
Q

This indentation often creates a thin, tongue-like process of the superior lobe, the ______, which extends below the cardiac notch and slides in and out of the costomediastinal recess during inspiration and expiration.

22
Q

Lingula is NOT part of inferior lobe, it is a part of the _____ lobe.

23
Q

Each lung has an ___, the blunt superior end of the lung ascending above the level of the 1st rib into the root of the neck that is covered by cervical pleura.

24
Q

Each lung has three surfaces:

A

costal, mediastinal, and diaphragmatic

25
Each lung has three borders:
anterior, inferior, and posterior
26
The lungs of a preserved cadaver, usually firm to the touch, have impressions that are formed by the structures adjacent to them, such as the ____
ribs
27
These markings/impressions on the ____ of a preserved cadaver provide clues to the relationships of the lungs; however, they are not visible during surgery or in fresh cadaveric or postmortem specimens.
lungs
28
The ____ ____ of the lung is large, smooth, and convex. It is related to the costal pleura, which separates it from the ribs, costal cartilages, and the innermost intercostal muscles.
costal surface
29
The ________ of the costal surface is related to the bodies of the thoracic vertebrae and is sometimes referred to as the vertebral part of the costal surface.
posterior part
30
The _____ ____ of the lung is concave because it is related to the middle mediastinum, which contains the pericardium and heart.
mediastinal surface
31
The mediastinal surface includes the ___ and thus receives the root of the lung, around which the pleura forms the pleural sleeve.
hilum
32
The pulmonary ligament hangs inferiorly from the _____ ____ around the lung root.
pleural sleeve
33
Because 2/3 of heart lies on L side of midline, the cardiac impression on the mediastinal surface of the L lung is much ____
larger.
34
If preserved, there is a groove for the esophagus and a cardiac impression for the heart on the mediastinal surface of the ____ lung.
right
35
The mediastinal surface of the left lung also features a prominent, continuous groove for the _______ and the descending (thoracic) aorta as well as a smaller groove for the esophagus.
arch of the aorta
36
The ____ _____ of the lung, which is also concave, forms the base of the lung, which rests on the dome of the diaphragm.
diaphragmatic surface
37
The concavity is deeper in the right ____ because of the higher position of the right diaphragmatic dome, which overlies the large liver.
lung
38
Laterally and posteriorly, the diaphragmatic surface is bounded by a thin, sharp margin (inferior border) that projects into the costodiaphragmatic ____ of the pleura.
recess
39
The _____ _______ of the lung is where the costal and mediastinal surfaces meet anteriorly and overlap the heart; the cardiac notch indents this border of the left lung.
anterior border
40
The ____ ____ of the lung circumscribes the diaphragmatic surface of the lung and separates this surface from the costal and mediastinal surfaces.
inferior border
41
The ____ ____ of the lung is where the costal and mediastinal surfaces meet posteriorly; it is broad and rounded and lies in the cavity at the side of the thoracic region of the vertebral column.
posterior border
42
The lungs are light pink in healthy children and people who are non-smokers and live in a ___ environment.
clean
43
The lungs are commonly ___ and ___ in most adults who live in either urban or agricultural areas, especially those who smoke, because of the accumulation of carbon and dust particles in the air and irritants in tobacco that are inhaled.
dark and spotty
44
The lungs are capable of accumulating a considerable amount of ____ without being adversely affected.
carbon
45
Lymph from the lungs carries special ‘dust cells’( ____) that remove carbon from the gas-exchanging surfaces and deposit it in the ‘inactive’ connective tissue, which supports the lung or in lymph nodes receiving lymph from the lungs.
(phagocytes)
46
____ of the lungs (listening to their sounds with a stethoscope) and percussion of the thorax (tapping the thorax over the lungs with the fingers to detect sounds in the lungs) are important techniques of physical examination.
Auscultation
47
Auscultation assesses airflow through the ____ tree into the lobes of the lung.
tracheobronchial
48
_____ helps establish whether the underlying tissues are air filled (resonant sound), fluid filled (dull sound), or solid (flat sound).
Percussion
49
An awareness of normal anatomy, particularly the projection of the lungs and the portions that are overlapped by bone with associated muscles (e.g., the _____) enable the examiner to know where flat and resonant sounds should be expected.
scapula
50
Auscultation and percussion should always include the root of the neck where the ____ of the lungs are located.
apices