* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download CHS 115-125
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
The Thorax 8 -- The trachea or w · d · · b 111 plpe, IS a tu ular outgrowth of the gut. lt b gin ' b d f as a u rom the floor of the h d . P arynx an grows ta1lwa rd into the rib . H cage. e.re It fork~,. a~d e~ch fork (called a primary bronchus) keep ~n growtng and d1~1d~ng hke a branching tree, re ulting in the formation of two lungs · 1 . tnstde the rib cage· As the emb ryomc . ung · grow f out rom t~e ta1l end of the trachea, the celom wrap around them. <:overed With a film of celomic lining, the lungs expand around either stde of the heart and press against the upper abdominal viscera. The a?dominal and. thoracic parts of the celom are broadly confluent Wit? each other m embryonic life (Fig. 8-1 ). ln amphibians and most reptiles, they remain confluent in the adult, which thus has only two celomic cavities-the pericardia! cavity and a single, big celomic space that envelops the abdominal viscera (and sends left and right extensions up on either side of the heart to wrap around each lung). In mammals, however, the thorax and abdomen are separated in the adult by a muscular partition called the diaphragm. An adult mammal thus has at least four celomic cavities-one around the heart, one around each lung, and one more in the abdomen. (Human males also have two more in the scrotum, surrounding the testes.) Like most mammalian peculiarities, the diaphragm is associated with a high metabolic rate. It permits a more rapid and efficient turnover of respiratory gasses. Primitive air-breathing fish, like modern lungfish or frogs, had to rely on swallowing movements to gulp air into their lungs. Early reptiles evolved an improved method of breathing by suction, known as thoracic respiration. The breakthrough that made thoracic respiration possible was the appearance of a true rib cage, produced by stretching some of the thoracic ribs down to touch the sternum. The ribs that extended to the sternum had a joint at each end, and they could rotate around the axis defined by the two joints. When a typical reptile inhales, its ribs swing toward its head, with each rib rotating around its vertebral and sternal ends. 115 w M 3' i!? 2 1 I I I Fig. 8-1 Subd iviSIOn of the embryonic celom. A Schematic cross section through the heart of a five-week embryo. The pleura l and pericard ia! cavities are broad ly open into each other and the abdominal celom. B. Similar section at seven weeks: the pleuropericard ial fo lds have fused dorsal to the heart, separating pericardia! and pleura l cavities. A small open ing into the abdominal celom persists on the right; this would normally close during the sixth week. C. Diagram of the six celomic spaces in a male adult. H. heart; L, lung; T, testis. 6 < ;]s « , THE THORAX AN 0 zr IT S VI SCE RA descend ing aort a esophagus spinal cord _,- lung notochord , gut lung bud _opening into abdominal celom phrenic n. common cardinal v. A B \ \ pleurope;icardial fold pericard ia! cav ity heart serous pericardium Pleura: parietal I / / / ... visceral __ diaphragm , ..... T----- c A \~ '' . perrtoneum 117 THETHORA ' This movement, which is usually ompared to lifting the handle on a bucket (Fig. 8-2), increase the side-to--i de diam ter of the th rax and thus increa es thoracic volume. Air ru he into the lungs t fi ll thi added volume. The inhaled air is pu hed out again by dropping the costal "bucket handles" back toward the vertebral column again. Hug your rib cage, inhale deeply, and o b erve where and h \ V 6ur thorax expands to draw air in. The pumplike action of thoracic r spiration wa an improv ment over gulping air like a fi h. But it wa not very efficient by itself because part of the thoracic volume was fill ed on inhalation by th stomach, liver, and other abdomin al viscera lithering up into the thorax. You can get some idea of how thi affects re piratory volume by contracting your abdominal muscle harply (' ' ucking in your gut") when you inhale, thus shoving your stomach and liver up into your rib cage. Some device was needed to make the e vi era ray put so that the volume added by lifting the ribs would be wholly filled by inrushing air. In most modern reptiles, this problem h a been handled by introducing a sheet of elastic connective tis ue stretched across the abdominal end of the rib cage. When the ribs swing outward in inhalation, this partition becomes taut, preventing the abdominal viscera from moving up into the thorax. Thus, all the volume added to the thorax by the outward swing of the ribs contributes to the expansion of the lungs instead of being partly wasted in sliding the stomach and liver back and forth. Fig. 8-2 Rib movements in breathing. When we 1n ale. our ribs swing out and sideways (B) like he hand le on a bucket (A). They also rotate arou d an axis determ ined by each rib 's two .o'n s wi h the vertebrae (C), wh ich causes the thorax o expand ventrally as well (dotted lines). c B A I _, --------- .. I I 8 THE THORAX AND ITS VI SCERA In mammals, this arrangement is still fu_rther improved by making the partition out of voluntary muscle. Th1s muscular dome, the diaphragm, forms the floor of the human thorax (Fig. 8-3). When it contracts, it flattens out, increasing the volume of the thorax and shoving the abdominal viscera directly below it down toward the pelvis. Mammals can therefore breathe without moving their nb merely by contracting and relaxing the diaphragm. Thi kind of breathing is called abdominal respiration. The acquisition of a dia. phragm in mammals probably explains why mammals lack rib ir their abdominal body wall ; the abdomen must be able to bulge our freely to accommodate the viscera that are shoved tailward when the diaphragm contracts. Abdominal breathing is characteristic of human babies. Babie,· ribs are mostly cartilaginous; and they lie in a more horizontal plane, so the "bucket handles" are already fixed in the lifted position and cannot be lifted much to expand the thorax. In adults, the ribs have the bony rigidity and the orientation needed to transmit and with· Ag. 8-3 Midline section of diaphragm (black) seen from the left side, showing the vertebral levels at which it is pierced by the inferior vena cava (IVC), esophagus (ES), and aorta (AO). The heart (H) is shown as a dotted outline. I I 9 THE THORAX stand the stresses of thoracic breathing, so both abdominal and thoracic breathing are normally combined in each inh alation. • Anatomy of the Human Diaphragm The diaphragm is a sheet of hypaxial muscle, derived mostl y from cervical body segments. Its muscle fibers can be tho ught of as the missing parts of the incomplete layer of body-wall muscles in the neck, torn away and carried tailward by the expanding lungs as they grew down from the pharynx. In the adult, these o riginally cervical fibers are attached all around the caudal margin of the rib cage (including the lower end of the sternum) and to the top three lumbar vertebrae. From this ring-shaped origin, the diaphragm 's muscle fibers converge on a tendinous patch lying just below (ca udal to) the heart. The diaphragm is therefore dome-shaped, with the heart sitting atop the apex of the dome (Fig. 8-3). The dome's tendinous apex is called the central tendon of the diaphragm. It is roughly V-shaped, with the legs of the V extending dorsally around either side of the vertebral column. This tendinous part of the diaphragm is derived from the septum transversum (Fig. 9-4 ), a mass of unsegmented mesoderm that started out as a partition between the amniotic cavity and the yolk sac back when the heart was sitting out in front of the embryonic head. The heart remains attached to the central tendon indirectly via ligaments binding the fibrous pericardium to the apex of the V, so the heart rides up and down on the diaphragm as we breathe. When the diaphragm is at rest, the apex of the central tendon lies in front of vertebra T.8 or T.9; in deep inhalation, it may fall as low as T.ll, carrying the heart with it. Because the diaphragm's ventral attachments are at sternal level (about T.9) and its dorsal attachments are to the lowest ribs and upper lumbar vertebrae, the dorsal surface of the diaphragm slopes steeply tail ward (Fig. 8-3 ). The aorta, inferior vena cava, and gut run longitudinally between thorax and abdomen, so they must pass through holes in the diaphragm. The descending aorta, lying just ventral to the vertebral column, squeezes through between the vertebral bodies and the edge of the diaphragm. The diaphragm's edge is formed here by a tendinous arch over the aorta, the median arcuate ligament, from which some muscle fibers of the diaphragm take origin (Fig. 8-4). T either side of this median Ligament, the diaphragm is thickened to form a I 20 THE THORAX AND IT S VI SC ERA caval opening (IVC) Fig. 8-4 Lower surface of d iaphragm and its attachments. IVC, inferior vena cava. I I I I I I I I Arcuate ligaments: central tendon I I I I I 1. median ___ esophag eal opening 12th rib crura L.4 pair of muscular pillars, the left and right crura (L., " legs"). The cru·· originate from the lumbar vertebral bodies and fan out craniad insert into the central tendon. Because the heart rides on the centr tendon and the inferior vena cava passes directly into the right atriur of the heart, the caval opening for that vein lies in the tendon ju t to the right of the midline. The third big opening in the diaphragm lie just outside the central tendon, cradled in the notch of th e V. Through it passes the esophagus, the thoracic part of the gut that connect th pharynx with the stomach. The esophageal opening lies on the t l:t side, where the stomach sits. The muscle fibers of the diaphragm· right crus, oddly enough, divide and swing over to the left to form 3 loop around the esophagus. This loop may have some limited sphin teral action on the esophagus. Two longitudinal hypaxial rnu d e I2I THETHORAX lying alongside the vertebral column pass between the body wall and the edge of the diaphragm and are therefore (like the aorta) bridged by tendinous arches from which diaphragmatic fibers arise (Fig. 8-4): the medial (not median) arcuate ligament bridging the hind-limb muscle Psoas Major and the lateral arcuate ligament bridging Quadratus Lumborum. All these dorsal tendinous arches along the back edge of the diaphragm are tacked down to the bodies and transverse processes of the upper lumbar vertebrae. • The Lungs and Pleura The trachea lies in the midline of the thorax, ventral to the esophagus and dorsal to the ascending aorta and the three great branches from the peak of the aortic arch. The trachea ends by dividing into the two primary bronchi, each of which subdivides further into secondary and tertiary bronchial branches inside each lung. The resulting "bush" is known as the respiratory tree. Its surface area is huge, providing roughly 100 square meters of respiratory epithelium for gas exchange. The lung is composed of the respiratory tree and the highly vascular mesodermal tissues that surround it. As the fetal lungs form around the proliferating bronchi, branches of the great pulmonary vessels grow into each lung and branch along with the branches of the respiratory tree, getting ready to flood the lung's tissues with right ventricular blood and drain oxygenated blood back to the left atrium in postnatal life. The arterial branches generally run in front of (ventral to) the branches of the bronchial tree. The upper (superior) pulmonary vein on each side enters the lung in front of the primary bronchus and drains the ventral parts of the lung; the lower (inferior) vein runs behind the bronchus and drains the more dorsal parts. As usual, the veins are more likely than the arteries to deviate from the standard setup; there may be one or three veins on either side. The point where the bronchus and vessels disappear into the substance of the lung is called the root of the lung. Because the heart lies mostly to the left of the midline, the left lung has less room on its side and is smaller than the right lung. This difference between the two lungs shows up in the respiratory tree. The right primary bronchus divides into three secondary bronchi, but its counterpart on the left has only two secondary branches. The celomic space surrounding each lung is called a pleural cavity. The two pleural cavities are separated by the mass of structures in the ., I A 23 THE T HOR A ,' rib 1 B I I I I , ) ~ , _ , t r . I I ,'•.' ,. ' ' '' '-' posterior intercostal : ' / / 'I _,: __, ..... ~ , / ,_,, .,. ....... vv. :....--....._-;;~ diaphragm \ ~~.;.. · \ \ \ IVC \ ' esophagus ' ··· · 'sympathetic trunk-- ......._ ', -.::··.. '_ .... , lung substance around its branches, forming little sub-lung called lobes. The divisions between them are visible grossly beca use the visceral pleura dips in between them. There are, of course, three lobes in the right lung and two in the left, corresponding to the number of secondary bronchi in each. Although each tertiary bronchus al o supplies its own separate subdivision of a lobe, these smaller unit or bronchopulmonary segments are not separated by folds of visceral pleura the way the lobes are. They therefore cannot be seen in disse tion. The usual arrangement of tertiary bronchi is shown in Figure 8-7. It is of considerable clinical importance, because infection o r obstructions may affect only a single tertiary bronchus and hence ma y be confined to a single bronchopulmonary segment. The various parts of the parietal pleura are named for the part of the thoracic walls to which they adhere-diaphragmatic pleura over the upper (thoracic) surface of the diaphragm, costal pleura over the inside of the rib cage, and mediastinal pleura lying against the mediastinum. The parietal pleura also bulges out a little through the superior thoracic outlet, forming a dome known as the cupola of the pleura. This bulging dome is protected by the clavicle in front and by the head of the first rib in back and is upported by the apex of the lung T24 THE THORAX AND ITS VI SCER A Fig. 8-7 Lungs, lobes. and segments. U, upper lobe; M, middle lobe; L, lower lobe. Bronchopulmonary segments: 1, apical ; 2, apicoposterior; 3, an terior; 4. lateral ; 5, medial ; 6. posterior; 7, superior: 8, anterior basal; 9, latera l basal ; 10. medial basal ; 11 , posterior basal ; 12, inferior lingular; 13, superior lingular LATERAL ANTERIOR 7 7- ' '' '' ' oblique fissure horizontal fissure - . . - - - - MEDIAL oblique fissure ..- I I 9 RIGHT LUNG LEFT LUNG pressing against it from underneath. Because the lung cannot exp nd upward past this pleural cupola during inhalation, it must expand downward. It does this by sliding into and filling the potential space between the costal and diaphragmatic pleura when the diaphragm descends. This potential space between the lower ribs and the sloping dorsal face of the diaphragm is called the pleural recess. The function of the pleura is to lubricate the movements of the lungs as they slide I 25 THE THORAX up and down inside the rigid rib cage with each cycle of breathing. When infection or scarring leaves the inside of the pleural sac less slippery, there may be chafing between visceral and parietal pleura, whereupon breathing becomes painful. This condition (or any other inflammation of the pleura) is known as pleurisy. • Mechanics of Breathing During quiet breathing, the diaphragm is the most important respiratory muscle in adult human beings. The role of the Intercostals is debated. Electromyographic studies suggest that the Scaleni may be more important than the lntercostals in lifting the ribs during inspiration, especially during deep inspiration. The Scaleni, which represent the remnants of the lateral body-wall layers in the neck, extend from the cervical transverse processes down to the first two ribs. The first costal cartilage has no synovial joint with the sternum but is joined directly to the manubrium by a synchondrosis. Therefore, when the Scaleni contract, the first ribs and the sternum swing forward and upward as a single unit. Anteroposterior diameter of the rib cage is increased directly by this means and by rotation of each rib on its two vertebral facets (Fig. 8-2). The indirect pull exerted by the Scaleni on the other ribs (via the intercostal muscles) raises the costal "bucket handles" and thus increases the transverse diameter of the thorax. The Intercostals help to lift the ribs but do not draw them closer together. If you press your left fingertips to the right side of your neck in front, just above the first rib, you may be able to feel the Scaleni contract when you inhale deeply. In forced inhalation or exhalation, all the muscles attaching to or wrapping around the rib cage can come into play. You can easily feel the lateral muscles of your own abdominal wall contracting when you cough; this helps push the diaphragm upward and anchors the lower ribs so that the Internal Intercostals can draw the ribs downward. A vigorous cough produces a sudden increase in intraabdominal pressure and so may precipitate a rupture of a loop of intestine through one of the weaker spots in the abdominal wall. Some of the limb muscles that originate from the rib cage also aid in forced exhalation, as you can observe by coughing with your hand thrust into your armpit and feeling the surrounding shoulder muscles contract.