This structure is known to be injured in a supracondylar fracture.
What is the popliteal artery?
This nerve pierces coracobrachialis.
What is the musculocutaneous nerve?
In shoulder dislocation, this structure is the most lateral bony prominence.
What is the acromion?
This structure is the only motor innervation of the phrenic nerve.
What is the diaphragm?
This structure runs posterior to the lung root.
What is the vagus nerve?
This structure is superficial to the middle meningeal artery.
What is the ptrion?
These two muscles are responsible for plantar flexion of the ankle and eversion of the foot.
What are the fibularis longus and brevis muscles?
This muscle in the thenar group is dually innervated.
What is the flexor pollicis brevis?
This structure on the rib is easily fractured in a traffic accident.
What is the posterior angle?
The neurovascular structures run between these two intercostal layers.
What are the internal and innermost intercostals?
This structure is the leftmost branch of the aorta.
What is the left subclavian artery?
This muscle is the floor of the oral cavity.
What is the mylohyoid?
This structure is found in the first webbed space of the toes. Inject this with local anesthesia before removing an ingrown toenail!
What is the deep branch of the common fibular nerve?
One of the places you can find this structure is sandwiched between flexor digitorum superficialis and flexor digitorum profundus.
What is the median nerve?
This structure is unique to lumbar vertebrae.
What is the mammillary process?
These muscles in the back are used for proprioception.
What are the serratus posterior superior and inferior?
These two structures come together to form the superior vena cava.
What are the brachiocephalic veins?
This strap muscle of the neck is not innervated by the ansa cervicalis.
What is the thyrohyoid muscle?
This structure starts at the dorsum of the foot, runs anterior to the medial malleolus, continues four finger widths medial to the patella, and terminates into a vessel in the femoral triangle.
What is the great saphenous vein?
This structure is deep to the median cubital vein but superficial to the median nerve and brachial artery.
What is the bicipital aponeurosis?
These structures pass through the optic canal.
What are optic nerve and ophthalmic artery?
This intercostal layer is used for inspiration/inhalation.
What is the external intercostal layer?
This structure enters the thoracic cavity at the level of T12 with the aorta and the azygos vein.
What is the thoracic duct?
Sensation of the vertex of your scalp is innervated by this cranial root.
What is C2?
This muscle is the floor of the femoral triangle.
What is pectineus?
This structure’s borders are: latissimus dorsi, trapezius, and vertebral border of scapula.
What is the triangle of auscultation?
These two structures form Guyon’s Tunnel.
What is the hook of hamate and pisiform?
This characteristic of the rib allows for an increase in the transverse dimension of the thoracic cavity.
What is the shape of the ribs?
Level of chest tube insertion for hemopneumothorax on the left side.
What is the fourth intercostal space?
Cranial nerve 7 passes through this opening in the posterior cranial fossa.
What is the internal acoustic meatus?