Anatomy
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Clinical Questions
100

These muscles are innervated by the superior gluteal nerve.

Gluteus medius, minimus, and tensor fascia latae.

100

What can cause ipsilateral loss of  discriminative touch & proprioception combined with contralateral analgesia

Spinal cord hemisection (Brown-Sequard Syndrome)

100

These cells give rise to cells that form most of the peripheral nervous system and autonomic nervous system.

Neural crest cells

100

Injury to this nerve results in weakness in dorsiflexion that causes foot drop and prompts steppage gait.

common fibular (peroneal) n.

100

This nerve is often damaged with a fibular neck fracture.

Common Peroneal (Fibular) Nerve

200

These muscles form a conjoint tendon called the pes anserinus.

Sartorius m. (Ant.)

Gracilis m. (Med.)

Semitendinosus m. (Post.)

200

Non conscious proprioception from the lower body and trunk are carried by this tract

dorsal spinocerebellar tract

200

This adult structure arises from the rhombic lips

Cerebellum

200

A biker has lost sensation of the skin of his big toe over the plantar side. Which nerve is likely damaged?

Medial plantar n.

200

A patient with a deep knife wound in the
buttock walks with a waddling gait that is
characterized by the pelvis falling toward
one side at each step. Which nerve is damaged?

The superior gluteal nerve

300

This muscle corrects medial deviation of flexor digitorum longus tendon.

Quadratus plantae m.

300

If this structure were damaged, a patient would present with bilateral pain and temperature sensation loss below the level of the damage

Anterior White Commisure? (Spinothalamic decussation in spinal cord)

300

This layer of the neural tube will eventually form the cells that line the central canal of the spinal cord.

Ventricular zone (neuroepithelial layer)

300

These are the contents of the popliteal fossa (Bonus: in order from superficial to deep)

  • tibial nerve
  • popliteal vein
  • popliteal artery
  • common fibular nerve (also known as the common peroneal nerve)
300

A patient presents with sensory loss on
adjacent sides of the great and second toes
and impaired dorsi flexion of the foot. These
signs probably indicate damage to which nerve?

Deep fibular (peroneal) n.

400

The sciatic nerve enters the gluteal region between these two muscles.

Piriformis m. and superior Gemmellus m.

400

The somatotopy of the internal capsule from lateral to medial is

Foot, Leg, trunk, Hands/Arm, Neck

400

The cells contained in this plate give rise to sensory neuroblasts

Alar (sensory, dorsal) plate

400

The dorsalis pedis artery arises from this artery.

anterior tibial artery

400

A construction worker falls feet fi rst
from a roof. He sustains a fracture of the
groove on the undersurface of the susten-
taculum tali of the calcaneus bone. Which muscle tendon is most likely
torn?

Flexor hallucis longus

500

A chef drops a knife that then penetrates his right foot. He has trouble moving his 4th toe toward his pinky toe. What muscle did he likely damage?

Dorsal interosseous m.

500

What artery supplies the spinalthalamic and medial lemniscus tracts in the midbrain?

Proximal PCA

500

A tumor that causes unexplained hypertension and releases too much epinephrine and norepinephrine arises from these type of nerve cells.

Trunk nueral crest cells 

500

These structures (from anterior to posterior) pass deep to the flexor retinaculum in the tarsal tunnel. 

Tibialis posterior, flexor digitorum longus, posterior tibial vein/artery, tibial nerve, and flexor hallucis longus

500

A patient with hereditary blood clotting
problems presents with pain in the back of
her knee. An arteriogram reveals a blood clot
in the popliteal artery at its proximal end.
Which artery will still allow
blood to reach the foot?

Lateral circumflex femoral

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