The Back - Bones, Joints, Ligaments, Muscles Flashcards

1
Q

Give three examples of what could cause backpain

A

Aortic aneurysm - swelling of the abdominal aorta
Pancreatitis - inflammation of the pancreas
Renal colic - kidney stones

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2
Q

What are the functions of the vertebral column and vertebrae?

A
  • Locomotion
  • Supports body weight
  • Protects and transmits spinal cord and nerves
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3
Q

What is the primary and secondary curvature?

A

Primary curvature - concave anteriorly; remains in thoracic and sacral regions

Secondary curvature - concave posteriorly; remains in cervical and lumbar regions - develops from primary when child first stands up and walks

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4
Q

What allows the formation of the secondary curvatures?

A

Intervertebral discs

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5
Q

Features of a typical vertebra

A
Body
Spine
Transverse processes
Vertebral foramen/canal - for spinal cord
Neural arch
Pedicle
Lamina
Inferior/superior articular facet
Intervertebral foramen - where the spinal nerve emerges
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6
Q

Features of a typical Cervical vertebra

A

Body - small
Bifid spine - two little processes
Vertebral foramen - large, triangular
Foramen transversarium - hole of the vertebral arteries and veins
Uncinate Processes - at lateral edges of body; synovial articulation with vertebra above (arthritis)
Superior articular facets

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7
Q

What is the greatest movement of the Cervical vertebrae?

A

Flexion, with some later flexion

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8
Q

Features of a typical Thoracic vertebra

A

Same except:
Costal demi-facets - upper for articulation with the head of its own rib
Bigger body, heart shaped
Smaller vertebral foramen
Superior articular facets face posteriorly
Transverse process has a facet for articulation with its own rib

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9
Q

What is the greatest movement of the Thoracic vertebrae?

A

Rotation

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10
Q

Describe the structure of the Atlas?

A

Has a pair of inferior and superior articular facets - inferior facets join onto the axis, while the superior facets join onto the Occipital Condyles of the skull
It also has a groove for the vertebral artery and a transverse process with foramen

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11
Q

What is the greatest movement of the Lumbar vertebrae?

A

Extension, with some flexion and later flexion

No rotation

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12
Q

What is the greatest movement of the Atlas vertebra?

A

Flexion and extension of the head at the atlanto-occipital joint (looking up at the ceiling)

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13
Q

Structure of the sacrum and coccyx

A
Ala
Sacral Promontory
Anterior and posterior foramen
Crests (Median, intermediate, lateral)
Sacral Hiatus (anaesthesia)
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14
Q

Structure of the Axis

A
Body with Odontoid process/dents
Transverse process with foramen
Vertebral foramen
Superior articular facets
Bifid spine
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15
Q

What is the greatest movement of the Axis vertebra?

A

Rotation at atlanto-axial joint

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16
Q

Main joints of the vertebrae?

A

Zygapophyseal
- between the superior and inferior articular facets

Intervertebral (secondary cartilaginous)
- between two adjacent vertebrae (intervertebral disc)

17
Q

What is the intervertebral disc made up of?

A

Anulus fibrosus - ring of fibrocartilage

Nucleus pulposus - semi-fluid

18
Q

What happens to the nucleus pulposus during herniation?

A

Compresses on the spinal cord and the nerves

19
Q

Ligaments of the vertebral column

A
  • Posterior longitudinal (behind vertebral body)
  • Anterior longitudinal (in front of vertebral body)
  • Ligamenta flava (between vertebral laminae)
  • Intertranverse (between transverse processes)
  • Supraspinous (between tips of the spine)
  • Interspinous (between all of the spine)
  • Ligamentum nuchae (from external occipital protuberance and foramen magnum to C7
  • Anterior longitudinal changes into Anterior atlanto-axial and Anterior atlanto-occipital membranes
  • Posterior longitudinal changes into Tectorial membrane
  • Ligamentum flavum changes into Posterior atlanto-axial and Posterior atlanto-occipital membranes
  • Alar ligaments
  • Superior longitudinal, transverse, inferior longitudinal bands of cruciate ligaments
20
Q

What is the blood supply of the vertebral column like?

A
  • Arterial anastomosis
  • Internal and external venous plexuses
  • Basivertebral veins (between body and posterior ligament)
21
Q

Muscles of the back

A

Muscle 1 - most superficial, for upper limb movement

  • Trapezius - Levator Scapulae, Rhomboid Minor and Major; extends neck, braces and elevates shoulders; C7-T12
  • Latissium dorsi - iliac crest, lower ribs; shoulder extension and adduction; T6-T12

Muscle 2 - intrinsic proper muscles
- From the skull to the pelvis, keeps vertebral column upright
- Supplied by the dorsal rami of spinal nerves
3 layers:
- superficial: splenius cervicis, splenius capitis; together extend, alone rotate and laterally flex
- intermediate: erector spinae (iliocostalis, longissimus, spinalis; devided into capitis, cervicis, thoracis, lumborum)
- deep: transversospinalis - extend, rotate, laterally flex

Also remember abdominal muscles, e.g.: obliques and rectus