7. Neck Anatomy Flashcards

1
Q

What are the features of all 7 cervical vertebrae?
What is unique about C1? C2?

What are the joints and their movements between the head and neck?

A

All 7: small body, bifid spinous process, transverse foramen (for vertebral artery)
C1: ATLAS - no body, widest cervical vertebra, articulates with occipital condyles
C2: AXIS - dens (odontoid process) is the body of C1 by development, but joins C2

Atlanto-occipital Joint: ONLY flexion-extension
Atlanto-axial Joint: ONLY rotation

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2
Q

What are the 4 cervical ligaments?

A
  1. Dura Mater - adherent to bone
  2. Tectorial Membrane - deep to dura, continues as posterior longitudinal ligament
  3. Alar “Check” Ligaments - from dens to occipital bone to “check” or restrict rotation
  4. Cruciate ligaments - hold dens against atlas
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3
Q

Sternocleidomastoid (attachments, actions)

What is Torticollis?

A
From mastoid down to clavicular and sternal head
Flex intervertebral joints, Extend atlanto-occipital joint (due to attachment)
Laterally bend neck
Contralateral rotation (attaches to back of jaw)

Torticollis: greater muscle tone or fibrosis (shortening) in one SCM - head positioning is flexed, laterally bent, and contralaterally rotated all due to one muscle

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4
Q

Trapezius actions on neck

A

Extend neck
Laterally bend neck
Contralateral rotation
(elevate, depress, retract shoulder girdle, upward rotation of scapula)

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5
Q

Inferior Oblique in suboccipital region (attachment, action, innervation)

A

spine of Axis to transverse process of Atlas
Action: same-side rotation
Innervation: dorsal rami of C1

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6
Q

Scalenes: names, actions, structures that pass behind/in front

What is Scalenus Anticus Syndrome? What is Costo-clavicular Syndrome?

A

3 scalenes: anterior, middle, posterior
Action: lateral bend neck, contralateral rotation, raise rib cage
Behind Ant Scalene: Brachial Plexus, Subclavian Artery
In front of Ant Scalene: Subclavian Vein, Phrenic Nerve

Scalenus Anticus: compression of brachial plexus/subclavian artery in INTERSCALENE TRIANGLE

Costo-Clavicular Syndrome: compression of nerve/vasculature b/w clavicle and first rib - ALL structures pass through here, post-scalenes

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7
Q

What are the infrahyoid “strap” muscles? What are their innervations?

Whiplash-Hyperextension Injury vs. Hyperflexion Injury vs. Compression Injury

A

Straps: Omohyoid, Sternohyoid, Sternothyroid, Thyrohyoid
Other: Digastric (Mandible to mandible through hyoid), Mylohyoid, Cricothyroid

Whiplash-Hyperextension: soft tissue injury to anterior/lateral structures (discs, ligaments) - can stretch trachea/larynx (hoarse voice), concussion/brain injury

Hyperflexion: posterior structures - vertebrae dislocations/instability (more serious)

Compression: bodies of cervical vertebrae crushed, SC damage in severe cases

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8
Q

Components of Posterior Triangle of Neck and what runs through it

Components of Carotid Triangle and what runs through it

A

Posterior: SCM, Omohyoid, Trapezius (CN XI through here)

Carotid: Omohyoid, Digastric, SCM (contains carotid sheath)

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9
Q

What are the 3 compartments of the Neck? What is the Danger zone?

A
  1. Vertebral: Veterbral bone and muscle surrounded by prevertebral fascia
  2. Visceral: surrounded by pretracheal fascia (contains thyroid, parathyroids, trachea, esophagus, recurrent laryngeal nerves)
  3. Carotid Sheaths: contain common carotid, int jugular vein, vagus nerve

Compartments enveloped by deep/investing fascia
Danger Zone: Behind Alar Fascia (between visceral/vertebral compartments) - huge infection/cancer risk of spead to mediastinum

Retropharyngeal Space: b/w alar fascia and pretracheal fascia
Buccopharyngeal Fascia: name for alar fascia above tracheal level

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10
Q

What are the pharyngeal constrictors and what passes between them?

A

Superior PC - attaches to buccinator
Middle PC - attaches to hyoid
Inferior PC - attaches to thyroid/cricoid cartilages

Above Sup PC: auditory tube, levator palati
B/w Sup/Mid PC - CN IX, Stylopharyngeus m.
B/w Mid/Inf PC - Internal Laryngeal Nerve (through thyroihyoid membrane)

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11
Q

What are the motor nerves and general sensory nerves arising from the cranial plexus?

A

Motor: Phrenic n. (to diaphragm, over ant scalene), Ansa Cervicalis (to strap muscles), direct muscular branches

Cutaneous: Transverse Cervical (across neck), Supraclavicular n., Greater Auricular (around ear, travels with ext. jugular vein), Lesser Occipital (behind ear)
All cutaneous nerves emerge from posterior triangle

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12
Q

What are the three main neck veins and the connections between them?

A
  1. Anterior Jugular
  2. Internal Jugular
  3. External Jugular

Retromandibular Vein - Ext to Int
Communicating Branch - Int to Ant

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