Foregut, Midgut, Hindgut Flashcards

1
Q

Which organs sit within the foregut

A
Liver
Gallbladder
Oesophagus
Upper 1/2 of duodenum
Stomach
Pancreas
Spleen
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2
Q

Which organs sit within the midgut?

A
Lower 1/2 of duodenum
Ileum
Jejunum
Caeceum
Ascending colon
Proximal 2/3 of tranverse colon
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3
Q

Which organs sit within the hindgut?

A

Distal 1/3 of transverse colon
Descending colon
Sigmoid colon
Upper rectum

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4
Q

Where are the lateral paracolic gutters? How are they formed? What is their clinical significance?

A

Spaces that lie between the lateral surfaces of the ascending and descending colons and the posterolateral abdominal wall. Formed as the ascending and descending colons are retroperitoneal structures.
Infection can spread via these spaces anywhere between the diaphragm and pelvic cavity.

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5
Q

At what vertebral level is the oesophageal hiatus? What is it?

A

The point at which the oesophagus passes through the diaphragm to enter the abdominal cavity
T11/12

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6
Q

At what vertebral level does the pylorus sit?

A

L1

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7
Q

At what vertebral level does the head of the pancreas sit?

A

L2

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8
Q

Which mesenteries attach to the foregut, midgut and hindgut?

A

Foregut: dorsal and ventral mesenteries

Midgut and hindgut: dorsal mesenteries only

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9
Q

Where is the lesser omentum? What does it contain?

A

Peritoneum between the lesser curvature of the stomach and duodenum and the liver. Consists of 2 parts:

  • Hepatogastric ligament (stomach to liver)
  • Hepatoduodenal ligament (duodenum to liver) Contains bile duct, hepatic artery, hepatic portal vein
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10
Q

Which arteries supply the duodenum?

A

Superior mesenteric artery via inferior pancreaticoduodenal artery
Coeliac trunk via gastroduodenal artery

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11
Q

What type of muscle does the oesphagus contain?

A

Upper 1/3: skeletal (voluntary) muscle

Lower 2/3: smooth (involuntary) muscle

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12
Q

Where does the oesophagus begin and end?

A

Distal laryngopharynx to lower oesophageal sphincter (gastro-oesophageal junction)

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13
Q

What nerve supplies the foregut?

A

Vagus

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14
Q

Where does the greater omentum extend from? What does it contain?

A

Extends from greater curvature of the stomach and proximal duodenum to the anterior surface of the transverse colon.
Contains fat, nerves, blood vessels, lymphatics

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15
Q

What role does the greater omentum have?

A

Immunity: can migrate to infected viscera, isolates and limits the spread of intraperitoneal infections.

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16
Q

What is the splenorenal ligament?

A

Layer of peritoneum connecting the spleen and left kidney, part of greater omentum

17
Q

What is the gastrosplenic ligament?

A

Layer of peritoneum extending from the greater curvature of the stomach to the spleen

18
Q

What is the Pringle manoeuvre?

A

Pinching of the hepatic artery and portal vein in the hepatoduodenal ligament of the lesser omentum to cut off blood supply to the liver in surgery

19
Q

At what vertebral level does the aorta pass through the diaphragm?

A

Approx T12

20
Q

What does the hepatoduodenal ligament contain?

A

Portal triad: hepatic artery, hepatic vein and common bile duct

21
Q

What is the ligament of Treitz? What is it a useful landmark for?

A

Attaches the distal part of the duodenum (duodenal-jejunal flexure) to the left crus of the diaphragm.
Useful landmark for duodenal-jejunal flexure and as a marker point for upper vs lower GI bleed.