Lecture 6
Lecture 7
Lecture 8
Lecture 9
Lecture 10
100

Which artery passes the teres major muscle and becomes the brachial artery to the upper extremity?

Axillary artery

100

What is the structure of lymphatic vessels?

tunica interna, media, and adventitia 

have valves

100

Cutaneous branches from the cervical plexus joins at what location?

Erb’s point

100

Which fascia covers the entire head?

superficial cranial fascia

100

Which oral cavity is lined with endoderm?

Primitive pharynx

200

Which cervical spinal nerve passes between the anterior and middle scalene muscles?

Brachial plexus (C5-T1)

200
What are the 3 functions of the lymphatic system?

drain excess extracellular fluid from the body and return it to the veins of the circulatory system

mount an immune response

absorbs lipids from the digestive tract

200

What are the boundaries of the posterior triangle?

Posterior - trapezius muscle

Anterior - SCM

Inferior- clavicle

200

What are the contents of the carotid sheath?

Carotid artery, internal jugular vein, vagus nerve, deep cervical lymph nodes

200

Which nerve is associated with branchial arch 6?

Recurrent laryngeal nerve

300

List the 4 branches of the subclavian artery

Internal thoracic a.

Vertebral a

Thyrocervical trunk

Costocervical trunk

300

What are the primary and secondary lymphoid organs? What is the difference between the roles of primary and secondary lymphoid organs?

-- primary --

produce and mature lymphocytes 

thymus, bone marrow

-- secondary --

store lymphocytes and initiate adaptive immune responses

lymph nodes, spleen, lymphoid nodules in the GI tract, tonsils

300

List the 4 infrahyoid muscles

Sternohyoid m

Sternothyroid m

Thyrohyoid m

Omohyoid m

300

What part of the carotid artery are chemoreceptors located in? baroreceptors?

chemoreceptors - the carotid body

baroreceptors - the carotid sinus

300

What pouch and cleft is associated with branchial arch 2?

Palatine tonsils, cervical sinus

400

An injury to which nerve may lead to mid-humeral fractures?

Radial nerve

400

What are the right and left patterns of lymphatic drainage?

right: right lymphatic ducts drain into the right subclavian vein

left: left jugular trunk drains into the left thoracic duct, which then drains at the junction of the left subclavian and the left jugular vein

400

What type of contractions of the infrahyoid muscles stabilizes the hyoid?

isometric/eccentric

400

What does the common carotid split into? Where does each branch go?

Splits into the external and internal carotid arteries


Internal goes to the brain and the eyes.


external goes to the neck, face, and meninges: superior thyroid, ascending pharyngeal, lingual, facial, occipital, posterior auricular, maxillary, and superficial temporal arteries


400

Which 2 developments of the skull form from neural crest cells and somites?

Membranous neurocranium

Neural chondrocranium 

500

List the 5 nerves in the superior thoracic aperture and one innervation for each.

Vagus n - GVE, GVA

Recurrent laryngeal n - SVE

Phrenic n - GSE

Brachial plexus - GSE, GSA

Sympathetic chain - GVE

500

Where does the cervical sympathetic chain synapse to the head, neck and, heart?

Head - synapses in the superior cervical ganglion

Neck - synapses in the inferior and middle cervical ganglia

Heart - synapses in the superior, middle, and inferior cervical ganglia

500

If the mandible is fixed by masticatory muscles, concentric contractions results in what movement?

Elevates the hyoid

500

What do the endocrine, respiratory, and alimentary layers of the cervical viscera cover?

endocrine - thyroid and parathyroid glands

respiratory - larynx and trachea

alimentary - pharynx and esophagus

500

List the 2 major regions of the tongue and list associated arches, sensation and taste innervations.

Oral tongue (anterior ⅔) - arch 1-2, GSA CN V, SVA CN VII

Pharyngeal tongue (posterior ⅓) - arch 3, GSA CN IX, SVA CN IX

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