Aorta Pass This Test
On My Last Nerve
Pain in the Neck
Armed and Dangerous
Hand it Over
100

These are the three specific types of semilunar cusps found in the Aortic Valve.

What are the posterior, right, and left cusps?

100

This nerve, which supplies the serratus anterior, is unique because it travels along the superficial surface of the muscle rather than deep to it.

What is the long thoracic nerve?

100

This specific cervical disc is the only one that characteristically refers pain superiorly into the head.

What is the C2 disc?

100

This "joint" is a muscular articulation between the concave anterior scapula and the convex posterior rib cage.

What is the scapulothoracic joint?

100

While multiple muscles flex the fingers, this one is the only one of them that can flex the distal interphalangeal (DIP) joints.

What is the flexor digitorum profundus (FDP)?

200

This small, smooth-walled area of the left ventricle serves as the outflow tract leading to the aortic orifice.

What is the aortic vestibule?

200

This part of the brachial plexus passes through the gap between the anterior and middle scalene muscles.

What are the roots (ventral rami)?

200

These joints, unique to the cervical spine, create a "bivalve" or "bipartite" disc by age 25.

What are the uncovertebral joints (Joints of Luschka)?

200

This ligament, found in the elbow, encircles the head of the radius to allow for pivoting.

What is the annular ligament?

200

This carpal bone is the most commonly fractured and is located in the floor of the anatomical snuffbox.

What is the scaphoid?

300

This crescent-shaped depression in the interatrial septum is a remnant of the foramen ovale.

What is the fossa ovalis?

300

These are the three specific branches that arise from the third part of the axillary artery.

What are the subscapular, anterior circumflex humeral, and posterior circumflex humeral arteries?

300

This muscle is an essential landmark that divides the anterior and posterior triangles of the neck.

What is the sternocleidomastoid (SCM)?

300

This is the ratio of glenohumeral to scapulothoracic motion during full shoulder abduction.

What is 2:1 (Scapulohumeral Rhythm)?

300

This nerve pierces the supinator muscle through the Arcade of Frohse.

What is the deep branch of the radial nerve (PIN)?

400

This specific arterial branch typically arises from the left coronary artery and passes in the coronary sulcus to reach the posterior surface of the heart.

What is the circumflex branch?

400

This terminal branch of the medial cord provides sensory innervation to the medial side of the forearm.

What is the medial antebrachial cutaneous nerve?

400

These are the three parts of the longus colli muscle.

What are the superior oblique, inferior oblique, and vertical parts?

400

This structure is the primary stabilizer of the distal radioulnar joint and is frequently injured in wrist traumas.

What is the TFCC (Triangular Fibrocartilage Complex)?

400

These four muscles make up the thenar compartment of the hand.

What are the abductor pollicis brevis, flexor pollicis brevis, opponens pollicis, and adductor pollicis?

500

This unusual vascular relationship occurs because blood flows in the same direction within this paired artery and vein on the left side of the heart.

What are the circumflex branch and the great cardiac vein?

500

This cord of the brachial plexus is formed by the union of the anterior divisions of the upper and middle trunks.

What is the lateral cord?

500

This specific muscle of the neck is innervated by the facial nerve (CN VII) and helps depress the mandible or draw the corners of the mouth inferiorly.

What is the platysma?

500

During wrist flexion, this specific percentage of the motion occurs at the midcarpal joint.

What is 60%?

500

In the deep layer of the hand, the adductor pollicis is unique because of this nerve that innervates it.

What is the deep branch of the ulnar nerve?

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