Surgical Anatomy Part 6

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W. Submaxillary gland.

X. Digastric muscle.

Y. Lymphatic body.

Z. Hyoid bone.

1. Thyroid cartilage.



2. Superior thyroid artery.

3. Anterior jugular vein.

4. Hyoid half of omo-hyoid muscle.

5. Sterno-hyoid muscle.

6. Top of the sternum.

7. Clavicle.

8. Trapezius muscle.

9. Splenius capitis and colli muscle.

10. Occipital half of occipito-frontalis muscle.

11. Levator auris muscle.

12. Frontal half of occipito-frontalis muscle.

13. Orbicularis oculi muscle.

14. Zygomaticus major muscle.

15. Buccinator muscle.

16. Depressor anguli oris muscle.

(Page 16)

[Ill.u.s.tration: Right side of the head, showing blood vessels, muscles and other internal organs. ]

Plate 4

COMMENTARY ON PLATES 5 & 6.

THE SURGICAL FORM OF THE DEEP CERVICAL AND FACIAL REGIONS, AND THE RELATIVE POSITION OF THE PRINc.i.p.aL BLOODVESSELS AND NERVES, &c.

While the human cervix is still extended in surgical position, its deeper anatomical relations, viewed as a whole, preserve the quadrilateral form. But as it is necessary to remove the sterno-cleido-mastoid muscle, in order to expose the entire range of the greater bloodvessels and nerves, so the diagonal which that muscle forms, as seen in Plates 3 and 4, disappears, and thus both the cervical triangles are thrown into one common region. Although, however, the sterno-mastoid muscle be removed, as seen in Plate 5, still the great bloodvessels and nerves themselves will be observed to divide the cervical square diagonally, as they ascend the neck from the sterno-clavicular articulation to the ear.

The diagonal of every square figure is the junction line of the opposite triangles which form the square. The cervical square being indicated as that s.p.a.ce which lies within the mastoid process and the top of the sternum--the symphysis of the lower maxilla and the top of the shoulder, it will be seen, in Plate 5, that the line which the common carotid and internal jugular vein occupy in the neck, is the diagonal; and hence the junction line of the two surgical triangles.

The general course of the common carotid artery and internal jugular vein is, therefore, obliquely backwards and upwards through the diagonal of the cervical square, and pa.s.sing, as it were, from the point of one angle of the square to that of the opposite--viz., from the sterno-clavicular junction to the masto-maxillary s.p.a.ce; and, taking the anterior triangle of the cervical square to be that s.p.a.ce included within the points marked H 8 A, Plate 5, it will be seen that the common carotid artery ranges along the posterior side of this anterior triangle. Again: taking the points 5 Z Y to mark the posterior triangle of the cervical square, so will it be seen that the internal jugular vein and the common carotid artery, with the vagus nerve between them, range the anterior side of this posterior triangle, while the subclavian artery, Q, pa.s.ses through the centre of the inferior side of the posterior triangle, that is, under the middle of the shaft of the clavicle.

The main blood vessels (apparently according to original design) will be found always to occupy the centre of the animal fabric, and to seek deep-seated protection under cover of the osseous skeleton. The vertebrae of the neck, like those of the back and loins, support the princ.i.p.al vessels. Even in the limbs the large bloodvessels range alongside the protective shafts of the bones. The skeletal points are therefore the safest guides to the precise localities of the bloodvessels, and such points are always within the easy recognition of touch and sight.

Close behind the right sterno-clavicular articulation, but separated from it by the sternal insertions of the thin ribbon-like muscles named sterno-hyoid and thyroid, together with the cervical fascia, is situated the brachio-cephalic or innominate artery, A B, Plates 5 and 6, having at its outer side the internal jugular division of the brachio-cephalic vein, W K, Plate 5. Between these vessels lies the vagus nerve, E, Plate 6, N, Plate 5. The common carotid artery, internal jugular vein, and vagus nerve, hold in respect to each other the same relations.h.i.+p in the neck, as far upwards as the angle of the jaw. While we view the general lateral outline of the neck, we find that, in the same measure as the blood vessels ascend from the thorax to the skull, they recede from the fore-part of the root of the neck to the angle of the jaw, whereby a much greater interval occurs between them and the mental symphysis, or the apex of the thyroid cartilage, than happens between them and the top of the sternum, as they lie at the root of the neck. This variation as to the width of the interval between the vessels and fore-part of the neck, in these two situations, is owing to two causes, 1st, the somewhat oblique course taken by the vessels from below upwards; 2dly, the projecting development of the adult lower jaw-bone, and also of the laryngeal apparatus, which latter organ, as it grows to larger proportions in the male than in the female, will cause the interval at this place to be much greater in the one than the other. In the infant, the larynx is of such small size, as scarcely to stand out beyond the level of the vessels, viewed laterally.

The internal jugular vein is for almost its entire length covered by the sterno-mastoid muscle, and by that layer of the cervical aponeurosis which lies between the vessels and the muscle. The two vessels, K C, Plate 5, with the vagus nerve, are enclosed in a common sheath of cellular membrane, which sends processes between them so as to isolate the structures in some degree from one another.

The trunk of the common carotid artery is in close proximity to the vagus nerve, this latter lying at the vessel's posterior side. The internal jugular vein, which sometimes lies upon and covering the carotid, will be found in general separated from it for a little s.p.a.ce.

Opposite the os hyoides, the internal jugular vein lies closer to the common carotid than it does farther down towards the root of the neck.

Opposite to the sterno-clavicular articulation, the internal jugular vein will be seen separated from the common carotid for an interval of an inch and more in width, and at this interval appears the root of the subclavian artery, B, Plates 5 and 6, giving off its primary branches, viz., the thyroid axis, D, the vertebral and internal mammary arteries, at the first part of its course.

The length of the common carotid artery varies, of course, according to the place where the innominate artery below divides, and also according to that place whereat the common carotid itself divides into internal and external carotids. In general, the length of the common carotid is considerable, and ranges between the sterno-clavicular articulation and the level of the os hyoides; throughout the whole of this length, it seldom or never happens that a large arterial branch is given off from the vessel, and the operation of ligaturing the common carotid is therefore much more likely to answer the results required of that proceeding than can be expected from the ligature of any part of the subclavian artery which gives off large arterial branches from every part of its course.

The sympathetic nerve, R, Plate 6, is as close to the carotid artery behind, as the vagus nerve, N, Plate 5, and is as much endangered in ligaturing this vessel. The branch of the ninth nerve, E, Plate 5, (descendens noni,) lies upon the common carotid, itself or its sheath, and is likely to be included in the ligature oftener than we are aware of.

The trunk of the external carotid, D, Plate 5, is in all cases very short, and in many bodies can scarcely be said to exist, in consequence of the thyroid, lingual, facial, temporal, and occipital branches, springing directly from almost the same point at which the common carotid gives off the internal carotid artery. The internal carotid is certainly the continuation of the common arterial trunk, while the vessel named external carotid is only a series of its branches. If the greater size of the internal carotid artery, compared to that of the external carotid, be not sufficient to prove that the former is the proper continuation of the common carotid, a fact may be drawn from comparative philosophy which will put the question beyond doubt, namely--that as the common carotid follows the line of the cervical vertebrae, just as the aorta follows that of the vertebrae of the trunk, so does the internal carotid follow the line of the cephalic vertebrae.

I liken, therefore, those branches of the so-called external carotid to be, as it were, the visceral arteries of the face and neck. It would be quite possible to demonstrate this point of a.n.a.logy, were this the place for a.n.a.logical reasoning.

The common carotid, or the internal, may be compressed against the rectus capitis anticus major muscle, 13, Plate 6, as it lies on the fore-part of the vertebral column. The internal maxillary artery, 16, Plate 6, and the facial artery, G, Plate 5, are those vessels which bleed when the lower maxilla is amputated. In this operation, the temporal artery, 15, Plate 6, will hardly escape being divided also, it lies in such close proximity to the neck and condyle of the jaw-bone.

The subclavian artery, B Q, Plate 5, traverses the root of the neck, in an arched direction from the sterno-clavicular articulation to the middle of the shaft of the clavicle, beneath which it pa.s.ses, being destined for the arm. In general, this vessel rises to a level considerably above the clavicle; and all that portion of the arching course which it makes at this situation over the first rib has become the subject of operation. The middle of this arching subclavian artery is (by as much as the thickness of the scalenus muscle, X, Plate 5) deeper situated than either extremity of the arch of this vessel, and deeper also than any part of the common carotid, by the same fact. So many branches spring from all parts of the arch of the subclavian artery, that the operation of ligaturing this vessel is less successful than the same operation exercised on others.

The structures which lie in connexion with the arch of the subclavian also render the operation of tying the vessel an anxious task. It is crossed and recrossed at all points by large veins, important nerves, and by its own princ.i.p.al branches. The vagus nerve, S E, Plate 6, crosses it at B, its root; external to which place the large internal jugular vein, K, Plate 5, lies upon it; external to this latter, the scalenus muscle, X, Plate 5, with the phrenic nerve lying upon the muscle, binds it fixedly to the first rib; more external still, the common trunk of the external jugular and shoulder veins, U, Plate 5, lie upon the vessel, and it is in the immediate vicinity of the great brachial plexus of nerves, P P, which pa.s.s down along its humeral border, many branches of the same plexus sometimes crossing it anteriorly.

The depth at which the middle of the subclavian artery lies may be learned by the s.p.a.ce which those structures, beneath which it pa.s.ses, necessarily occupy. The clavicle at its sternal end is round and thick, where it gives attachment to the sterno-cleido-mastoid muscle. The root of the internal jugular vein, when injected, will be seen to occupy considerable s.p.a.ce behind the clavicle; and the anterior scalenus muscle is substantial and fleshy. The united s.p.a.ces occupied by these structures give the depth of the subclavian artery in the middle part of its course.

The length of the subclavian artery between its point of branching from the innominate and that where it gives off its first branches varies in different bodies, but is seldom so extensive as to a.s.sure the operator of the ultimate success of the process of ligaturing the vessel. Above and below D, Plate 6, the thyroid axis, come off the vertebral and internal mammary arteries internal and anterior to the scalenus muscle.

External and posterior to the scalenus, a large vessel, the post scapular, G, Plate 6, R, Plate 5, arises. If an aneurism attack any part of this subclavian arch, it must be in close connexion with some one of these branches. If a ligature is to be applied to any part of the arch, it will seldom happen that it can be placed farther than half an inch from some of these princ.i.p.al collateral branches.

When the shoulder is depressed, the clavicle follows it, and the subclavian artery will be more exposed and more easily reached than if the shoulder be elevated, as this latter movement raises the clavicle over the locality of the vessel. Dupuytren alludes practically to the different depths of the subclavian artery in subjects with short necks and high shoulders, and those with long necks and pendent shoulders.

When the clavicle is depressed to the fullest extent, if then the sterno-cleido-mastoid and scalenus muscles be relaxed by inclining the head and neck towards the artery, I believe it may be possible to arrest the flow of blood through the artery by compressing it against the first rib, and this position will also facilitate the operation of ligaturing the vessel.

The subclavian vein, W, Plate 5, is removed to some distance from the artery, Q, Plate 5. The width of the scalenus muscle, X, separates the vein from the artery. An instance is recorded by Blandin in which the vein pa.s.sed in company with the artery under the scalenus muscle.

DESCRIPTION OF PLATES 5 & 6.

PLATE 5.

A. Innominate artery at its point of bifurcation.

B. Subclavian artery crossed by the vagus nerve.

Surgical Anatomy Part 6

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