Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Applied Anatomy and Clinical Correlations

Applied Anatomy and Clinical Correlations

Applied Anatomy and Clinical Correlations

On this page

Cervical Fascia & Spaces - Infection Highways

  • Superficial Cervical Fascia: Contains platysma, cutaneous nerves, superficial vessels & lymphatics.
  • Deep Cervical Fascia (DCF): Layers form compartments, influencing infection spread.
    • Investing Layer: Surrounds entire neck; splits to enclose SCM & trapezius.
    • Pretracheal Layer: Encloses thyroid, trachea, esophagus. Extends from hyoid to superior mediastinum.
    • Prevertebral Layer: Covers prevertebral muscles, vertebral column. Extends from skull base to coccyx.
  • Cervical Spaces & Infection Spread:
    • Retropharyngeal Space: Between prevertebral fascia & buccopharyngeal fascia (part of pretracheal).
      • Infection can spread to superior mediastinum.
    • Prevertebral Space (Danger Space): Between alar fascia (anteriorly) and prevertebral fascia (posteriorly).
      • Extends from skull base to diaphragm. Infections here can reach posterior mediastinum.
    • Carotid Sheath: Contains common/internal carotid artery, IJV, vagus nerve (CN X).

Neck Fascia and Spaces: Sagittal and Axial Views

Ludwig's Angina: Aggressive cellulitis of submandibular space (often odontogenic); can rapidly obstruct airway. Involves bilateral sublingual & submaxillary spaces. Spread to parapharyngeal & retropharyngeal spaces is common.

Triangles of the Neck - Surgical Hotspots

Carotid triangle and surrounding structures

SCM divides neck: Anterior & Posterior triangles.

  • Anterior Triangle (Midline, Mandible, SCM):
    • Submental: Lymph nodes.
    • Submandibular: Submandibular gland, Facial a./v., CN XII.
    • Carotid: Carotid sheath (CCA, IJV, CN X), CN XI, CN XII. Site for carotid endarterectomy.
    • Muscular: Thyroid, Parathyroids, Infrahyoid muscles.
  • Posterior Triangle (SCM, Trapezius, Clavicle):
    • Occipital: CN XI (superficial course!), Cervical plexus.
    • Supraclavicular: Subclavian a./v., Brachial plexus trunks, External Jugular Vein.
    • 📌 SANES: Spinal Acc. N. (CN XI), Arteries (subclavian), Nerves (brachial/cervical), EJV, Subclavian v.

⭐ The Spinal Accessory Nerve (CN XI) is highly vulnerable to iatrogenic injury in the posterior triangle, especially during lymph node biopsies (e.g., for lymphoma staging).

Neck Neurovasculature - Delicate Lifelines

  • Carotid System:
    • Common carotid: bifurcates C3-C4.
    • ICA: no neck branches. ECA: supplies head/neck.
    • Carotid sinus (baro), body (chemo) at bifurcation.
    • Clinical: Stenosis, TIA, dissection.
  • Jugular Veins:
    • IJV: main drainage; in carotid sheath (CCA, CN X).
    • EJV: superficial, crosses SCM.
    • Clinical: JVP (Rt IJV for CVP), central lines.
  • Key Nerves & Syndromes:
    • Vagus (X): RLN injury (thyroidectomy) → hoarseness. Bilateral → aphonia/stridor.
    • Accessory (XI): Injury (post. triangle biopsy) → trapezius weakness, shoulder droop.
    • Hypoglossal (XII): Injury → tongue deviates to lesion.
    • Sympathetic Trunk: Lesion (Pancoast) → Horner's.

⭐ Horner's: Ptosis, Miosis, Anhidrosis (📌 PAM).

Neurovasculature of the Neck

Neck Viscera & Lymphatics - Vital Passageways

  • Thyroid Gland: Largest endocrine gland.
    • Blood: Sup/Inf thyroid arteries. RLN vulnerable during surgery.
    • Clinical: Goiter, carcinoma. Pyramidal lobe (thyroglossal duct remnant).
  • Parathyroid Glands: Regulate calcium; risk of hypocalcemia post-thyroidectomy.
  • Larynx & Trachea: Airway.
    • Cricothyroidotomy (emergency), tracheostomy. RLN injury → hoarseness.
  • Pharynx & Esophagus: Food passage. Zenker's diverticulum (Killian's dehiscence).
  • Cervical Lymph Nodes:
    • Levels I-VII crucial for staging cancer.
    • Waldeyer's ring: lymphoid tissue (adenoids, tonsils).
    • Virchow's node (left supraclavicular): sentinel for GI/thoracic malignancy.
    • Thoracic duct drains to left venous angle. Lymphatic drainage of head and neck

⭐ The recurrent laryngeal nerve is most commonly injured during thyroidectomy at its entry point into the larynx, posterior to the cricothyroid joint.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Carotid pulse: palpate medial to SCM at cricoid cartilage (C6).
  • IJV cannulation: between SCM heads, aim for ipsilateral nipple.
  • Thyroidectomy: risks recurrent laryngeal nerve (hoarseness) & external laryngeal nerve (weak, high-pitch voice loss).
  • Cervical nodes: key for metastasis (Virchow's) & TB.
  • Torticollis: SCM spasm or contracture.
  • Retropharyngeal "Danger Space": infections spread to posterior mediastinum.
  • Phrenic nerve (C3-C5): injury causes ipsilateral diaphragmatic paralysis.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE