Exam 1 (PG 1-21) Flashcards Preview

Spinal Anatomy II > Exam 1 (PG 1-21) > Flashcards

Flashcards in Exam 1 (PG 1-21) Deck (128)
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1
Q

how many segments if in a typical column in an adolescent?

A

33

2
Q

how many vetebrae is in an adult?

A

26 vertebrae: 24 presacral segments, the 5 fused segments forming sacrum, and 4 fused segments forming the coccyx

3
Q

Describe the presacral vertebrae

A

they are individualy moveable and are divided into three regions: cervical, thoracis or dorsal, and lumbar; referred to as spine

4
Q

How many cervical veretbrae does the two-toed sloth have?

A

6

5
Q

how many cervical vertebrae does a mantee have?

A

6

6
Q

how many cervical vertebrae does an ant bear have?

A

8

7
Q

How many cervical vertebrae does the three-toed sloth have?

A

9

8
Q

Why is the sacrum revered?

A

Because of its relationship to fecundity and birthing as well as to the use of the pelvic region inforetelling or prophesying during human sacrifice

9
Q

Coccyx comes from Greek meaning?

A

cuckoo’s bill or beak

10
Q

Wat is the disparity in number and morphology of vertebrai within the population as a whole

A

gender variation (sexual dimophism), ontogenetic variation (growth/age variation), geographic or population based variation, and individual or idiosyncratic variation

11
Q

A typical male spinal column measures?

A

70 cm (27.5 - 28.75 inches)

12
Q

A typical female spinal vertebral column measures

A

60 cm (24.5-25.75 in)

13
Q

measurement of cervical region

A

12 centimeters (5in)

14
Q

measurements of thoracic region

A

28 cm (11 in)

15
Q

measurement of lumbar region

A

18 cm (7in)

16
Q

sacrum

A

12cm (5in)

17
Q

function of vertebral column (10)

A

protection, support, skeletal formation, weight-bearing transfer, muscle and ligament attachments, shape and position, various joints which forms within a motion segment, transmission, the eye and vestibular apparatus of the inner ear require a horizontal axis for optimum function, and stabilization

18
Q

muscle and ligamen attachments between vertebrae allows the torso to do what?

A

flex, extend, laterally bend, and rotate (motion); attachments to the extremities allows the torso to travel (locomotion)

19
Q

What facilitates movement and compensates for tension, torsion, compression, and shear forces “resiliency”

A

various joints which form within a motion segment

20
Q

Transmission from and to the CNS is accomplished by exte sites along the vertebral column known as

A

intervertebral foramina

21
Q

What organs require a horizontal asis for optimum function

A

eye and vestibular apparatus

22
Q

what is required for appropriate neural control of the vertebral column?

A

stabilization of visceral function

23
Q

All vertebrae have a major bony mass called vertebral body except…

A

C1 (atlas)

24
Q

Explain how the size and shape of the vertebral body differes within and between regions of the vertebral column

A

each segments increases in size from C2 (epitropheus) to S!. Segments below S1 demonstrates a gradual decrease in vertebral body size.

25
Q

What is the shape of the vertebral body in the cervical, thoracic, and lumbar region

A
Cervical= rectangular
Thoracic= triangular
Lumbar= reniform
26
Q

The surfaces of the vertebral body has a peripheral ring of compact bone called

A

superior/inferior epiphyseal rim

27
Q

inside compact bony rim is an area called

A

spongy/cancellous bone

28
Q

Explain the development of the vertebral body

A

Blood vessels penetrate the cartilage template and a primary ossification called centrum forms. Remnants of the superior and inferior cartilage template persist as the epiphyseal plate.(ossify bw 7-9 yrs old)

Blood vessels penetrate at the periphery of epiphyseal plate (isolated location). These ossify towards each other along the outside and at age 12 it unites to form the epiphyseal ring.

Last stage involves the union of the epiphyseal ring to the rest of the vertebral body. (synostosis) that occurs as early as 15 yrs old and forms the epiphyseal rim

29
Q

The epiphyseal ring is separated form the rest of the developing vertebral body by a layer of cartilage, an example of what joint?

A

amphiarthrosis synchondrosis or cartilage joint

30
Q

small openings found around the circumference of the vertebral body that supply the compact bone and or marro cavity is called?

A

nutrient or vascular foramina

31
Q

Found at the back of the vertebral body, one or two large openings where the basivertebral veins exit the marrow cavity at this site is called?

A

basivertebral venous foramina

32
Q

The anterior part of the vertebral arch attached to the vertebral body is called…

A

pedicle

33
Q

part of the vertebral arch which unites in the midline and serves to anchor the spinous process is called

A

lamina

34
Q

part of the vedrtebral arch between the pedicle and lamina is generically called

A

lamina-pedicle junction

35
Q

What does the lamina-pedicle junction serve as the attaching site for…

A

transverse process and the articular processes

36
Q

Where does the pedicle arise in the cervical vertebral body?

A

middle of the posterolateral margin

37
Q

Where does the pedicle arise from the thoracics and lumbars?

A

upper third to half of the postero-lateral margin of the vertebral body

38
Q

small concave indentations or scallops on the upper and lower margins of the pedicles are called

A

superior/ inferior vertebral notches or incisures

39
Q

Intervetebral foramen is formed by what?

A

when two segments are united in a vertebral couple or motion segment created between the pedicles

40
Q

The inferior vertebral notch forms the upper/lower boundary of the intervertebral foramen. What does the superior vertebral notch form

A

upper; lower boundary of the intervetebral foramen

41
Q

cervical pedicles are directed more _______from the vertebral body, while thoracic and lumbar pedicles are primarily directed ____

A

posterolateral; posterior

42
Q

laminae are directed more_____

A

posterior and median

43
Q

What is shingling

A

laminae overlapping

44
Q

what is the primary ligament of the lamina

A

ligamentum flavum

45
Q

ligamentum flavum ossifies at its attachment site forming spike-like projections called

A

para-articular processesq

46
Q

lamina pedicle junction is called what in the regions of the spine?

A

cervical=articular pillars

thoracics and lumbar= pars interarticularis

47
Q

fusion of the laminae provides an area of attachment for the spinous process called

A

spino-laminar junction

48
Q

tubular bone growth radiate from the vertebral arch into the transverse, vertical, and posterior planes is called

A

apophyses (transverse, articular, and spinous processes)

49
Q

How is the transverse process projected in the spinal region?

A
cervical= anteriolaterally at 60 degrees from the midline
thoracic= gradually force backwards by the lungs
lumbar= directed straight out
50
Q

they synovial joint formed by the facets of the vertebral couple is called

A

zygapophysis

51
Q

superior articular process lies in front of the joint space and is called

A

prezygapophysis

52
Q

inferior articular proces lies behind the joint space and is called

A

postzygapophysis

53
Q

What are the anterior boundaries of the intervertebral foramen

A

vertebral bodies of the vertebral couples, intervertebral disc, and posterior longitudinal ligament

54
Q

What are the four posterior boundaries of the intervertebral foramen?

A

postzygapophysis of teh vertebral body above, the prezygapophysis of the vertebral below, capsular ligament of the zygapophysis, and ligamentum flavum

55
Q

What is the superior boundaries of the intervertebral foramen

A

inferior vertebral notch of the segment above, inferior boundary is formed by the superior vertebral notch of the segment below

56
Q

spinous process that appears to overlap is called?

A

imbrication

57
Q

with the exception of C1, the vertebral foramen is formed by

A

vertebral body and vertebral arch

58
Q

what is the shape of the vertebral foramen of the spinal region

A

cervical, lumbar, and sacral= triangular

thoracic= oval

59
Q

spinal cord and proximal part of the PNS, and the coverings (meninges) are found until what vertebral foramen

A

L2

60
Q

What level of the vertebral foramen does the spinal cord typically terminate in

A

L1

61
Q

The peripheral nerve roots will continue with meninges until____ and what is formed

A

S2; dural cul de sac

62
Q

What does the epidural space contain

A

connective tissue, blood vessel, peripheral nerve, ligaments, and typical interstitial fluid

63
Q

What are some blood vessels found in the epidural space

A

anterior and posterior spinal canal arteries, anterior and posterior internal vertebral venous plexuses, and the basivertebral vein

64
Q

What ligaments are found in the epidural space?

A

posterior longitudinal ligament and ligamentum flavum

65
Q

In the epidural space, the lumbar spine contains series of unusual ligaments attaching the dura mater to the vertebral bodies, intervertebral disc, and or PLL is called

A

Hoffmann (anterior dural, meningovertebral) ligaments

66
Q

The primary neural tissue in the epidural space are?

A

recurrent meningeal, sinuvertebral or sinus vertebral nerve

67
Q

What is subdural space known as and what does it contain

A

potential space, serous fluid

68
Q

What does the subarachnoid space contain

A

CSF (area bw the arachnoid and pia mater of the spinal cord and proximal part of the PNS) blood vessels, nerves, and collections of connective tissues “ligaments”

69
Q

What arteries are found in the subarachnoid space?

A

anterior spinal artery (orgin ->C3-C6)
posterior spinal artery (origen-> end of spinal cord)
arterial vasa corona (include spinal and communicating arteries)
anterior and posterior proximal and distal radicular arteries
anterior and posterior medullary feeder arteries

70
Q

What veins are found in the subarachnoid space.

A

anterior and posterior longitudinal veins
venous casa corona (include communicating veins)
anterior and posterior radicular veins
anterior and posterior medullary veins
intervertebral veins

71
Q

What is dentate ligament (denticulate ligament)

A

lateral modification of pia mater

72
Q

How is the filum terminale internum formed (0.7-2mm in diameter)

A

when the neural tissue of the spinal cord terminates at L1 (sometimes L2)

73
Q

How and what location is the dural cul de sac formed?

A

at vertebral foramen S2 and the dura and arachnoid maters fuse together

74
Q

where does the cervical enlargement occur

A

C3-T1

75
Q

the greates transverse diagmeter of teh spinal cord is found at

A

C6 (38mm)

76
Q

lumbar enlargement of the spinal cord is found withing the vertebral canal of..

A

T9-T12

77
Q

Lumbar enlargement is at…

A

at the location of origin for spinal nerves L1-S3

78
Q

inside vertebral foramen of L1, the spinal cord tapers to from

A

conus medullaris

79
Q

What spinal nerves are found along the length of the conus medullaris

A

S4, S5, Co1

80
Q

What is cauda equina and where is it found?

A

collection of nerve roots occupying the vertebral foramina below L1 (horse’s tail)

81
Q

an angiogram of arteries over the caudal region of the cord covering the last arterial vasa corona and a contination fo the anterior spinal artery past the conus medullaries create what?

A

cruciate anastomosis

82
Q

Where and what forms the filum terminale externum?

A

below vertebral level S2, the meninges (dural, arachnoid, and pia maters) continue as a single fused thread

83
Q

the filum terminale externum’s connective tissue tether is attached at what vertebral boddies and what is the site of attachment called?

A

Co1 and Co2; coccygeal medullary vestige

84
Q

A conus medullaris below L1 and a filum terminale thicer than 2 mm leads to what?

A

tethered cord syndrome (progressive lower ext neurological deficiencies, urinary bladder deficienceis, orthopedic deformities, and back pain. => need surgery)

85
Q

What is consider typcial vertebrae in the cervicals

A

C3-C6

86
Q

What is considered atypical in the cervical region

A

C1, C2, C7

87
Q

Lateral view, the posterior height is greater/lesser than the anterior height

A

greater by 1-2 mm per segments

88
Q

what compenstates for the vertebral body height to form and maintain the lordotic (anterior) curve?

A

intervertebral disc height

89
Q

located on the superior epiphyseal rim, what is the lateral margins called on the vertebral body, an elevated projection

A

uncinate

90
Q

anterior view, region between the uncinate processes is called

A

anterior and posteiror groove

91
Q

What is the projections called in the inferior epiphyseal rim?

A

anterior lip and posteiro lip

92
Q

The beveled or indented area of the inferior epiphyseal rim is called

A

lateral groove or enchancrure (anvil)

93
Q

the uncinate process and lateral grove participate with the intervertebral disc to form what joint

A

joint of Luschka (uncovertebral joint, lateral intervertebral joint)

94
Q

what is the joint of Luschka classifed as for the researchers that believe this was a true synovical joint

A

modified diarthrosis sellar joint

95
Q

what ligament is attached to each cervical segment?

A

longus colli muscle

96
Q

What ligament is attached to the vertebral bodies of the cervical region?

A

anterior and posterior longitudinal ligaments

97
Q

pedicles project?

A

posterolateral (45 degrees)

98
Q

where does the cervical spinal nerves exit the spinal canal by

A

intervertebral foramina

99
Q

what classification of joint is formed by the ligamentum flavum to the lamina called?

A

amphiarthrosis syndesmosis

100
Q

what is the shape of the vertebral foramen of the cervicals?

A

triangular or heart-shaped

101
Q

What is associated with the vertebral body that may project into the vertebral foramen and where is the greatest frequency that this occurs in?

A

osteophytes; C5-C6 (27%) with C4-C5 and C6-C7 next at 17%

102
Q

Transverse process of typical cervicals is formed from fives osseous parts:

A

cotal element, anterior tubercle, costotransverse bar, posterior tubercle, and true transverse process

103
Q

costal element projects___ in the cervical region

A

anterolaterally

104
Q

What are the muscles attaching to the anterior tubercle?

A
anterior scalene
longus capitus
longus colli
anterior intertransversarii
anterior intertranverse ligament (may be present)
105
Q

what are the muscles attaching to the posterior tubercle?

A
splenius cervicis (C3-C4) 
iliocostalis cervicis
longissimus cervicis
levator scapula (C3-C4)
middle scalene
posterior scalene (C4-C6)
rotators
posterior intertransversarii
posterior intertransverse ligament (may be present)
106
Q

What connects the anterior and posterior tubercles

A

costotransverse bar (intertubercular lamella)

107
Q

what is attached to eh costotransverse bar

A

middle scalene and posterior intertransversarii muscles

108
Q

half of the costal element, half of true transverse process, the anterior and posterior tubercles, and entire costotransverse bar would together give rise to a cervical rib. This collective rib-forming region is

A

pleuapophysis

109
Q

What pulls the transverse process forward and downward in the cervical region?

A

tension from neck musculature accommodating head position and cervical spinal nerves accommodating plexus position.

110
Q

What is the degree of the transverse process anterior laterally and inferior

A

60 degrees anterior laterally and 15 degrees inferiorly

111
Q

in the mature cervical vertebra, the posterior tubercle is located below the horizontal plane of the anterior tubercle and a sulcus is formed along the top of the costotransverse bar that is called…

A

sulcus for the ventral ramus

112
Q

anterior tubercle of C6 is often enlarge and scalloped to accommodate the common carotid artery called

A

carotid tubercle

113
Q

What is found in the transverse foramen

A

vertebral artery, descending vertebral venous plexus, neural tissue representing sympathetic division of ANS (postganglionic sympathetic motor nerve fiber)

114
Q

On C3, C4, C5 the articular pillar is indented to accommodate the medial branch from the dorsal ramus of the cervical spine nerve called?

A

sulcus/groove for the dorsal ramus

115
Q

what is the traditional and current degree angle of artcular facets

A

40-45 degrees

55-60 degrees

116
Q

when does the facet angulation start to diminish and to what degree

A

C7-T1 about 10 degrees

117
Q

orientation of superior/inferior articular facet

A

BUM

FoLD

118
Q

what muscles attach to the articular process

A
longissimus cervicis,
longissimus capitis (C4-C6)
semipinalis vervicis (C4-C6)
semispinalis capitis (C4-C6)
semispinalis capitis (C4-C6)
multifidis (C4-C6) 
perhaps rotators
119
Q

what joint classification does the zygapophysis called

A

diarthrosis athrodia joint

120
Q

The capsular ligament of the zygapophysis joint blends with what?

A

attachment for the simispinalis capitis, multifidis, and rotator longus muscles

121
Q

what is commonly found in the cervical spine and that do they do?

A

meniscoidal folds; play a role in distributing pressure across the joint surface

122
Q

where is the joint motion of the cervical spine typically studied at

A

occipital-C2 range separately from C2-C7

123
Q

Studies of flexion-extension for the typical cercial region (C2-C7) have demonstrated that the greatest average ROM occurs at..

A

C5-C6 vertebral couple

124
Q

what is couple motion

A

occurs when one direction of motion simultaneously unites with a second direction or patter of motion

125
Q

Spinous process gradually increases in length from

A

C3-C6

126
Q

which race has a bifid in C3-C6, which one does not

A

caucasion does, african-american does not

127
Q

muscles attaching to the spinous process of typical cervicals are

A
spinialis cervicis (C3-C4) 
simispinalis cervicis (C3-C5)
semispinalis thoracis (C6)
multifidis
rotators
interspinalis
128
Q

what ligaments attach to the spinous process

A

interspinous ligaments and ligamentum nuchae