Thursday, March 31, 2011

Blood Supply to the Head and Neck
The Common Carotid Arteries (p. 804)

The Internal Carotid Artery (p. 804)
The External Carotid Arteries (p. 805)
Click here for a diagram of the external carotid artery and its branches.
The Superior Thyroid Artery (p. 805)
The Lingual Artery (p. 805)
The Facial Artery (p. 805)
The Ascending Pharyngeal Artery (p. 805)
The Occipital Artery (pp. 805-6)
The Posterior Auricular Artery (p. 806)

The Internal Jugular Vein (pp. 806-7)
Click here for a diagram on the internal jugular vein and its tributaries.
Tributaries of the Internal Jugular Vein (p. 807)

AORTIC ARCH

 

The arch of the aorta or the transverse aorta is the part of the aorta that begins at the level of the upper border of the second sternocostal articulation

 

OR

Arch of The Aorta - Cardiovascular System



The arch of the aorta or the transverse aorta is the part of the aorta that begins at the level of the upper border of the second sternocostal articulation of the right side, and runs at first upward, backward, and to the left in front of the trachea; it is then directed backward on the left side of the trachea and finally passes downward on the left side of the body of the fourth thoracic vertebra, at the lower border of which it becomes continuous with the descending aorta. It thus forms two curvatures: one with its convexity upward, the other with its convexity forward and to the left. Its upper border is usually about 2.5 cm. below the superior border to the manubrium sterni. It lies within the mediastinum. Related structures The ligamentum arteriosum connects the commencement of the left pulmonary artery to the aortic arch. The blood bypasses the lungs through the ductus arteriosus during embryonic circulation. This becomes the ligamentum arteriosum postnatal as pulmonary circulation begins. The aortic knob is the prominent shadow of the aortic arch on a frontal ...


No comments:

Post a Comment