Myocardial Infarction: Anatomy - Heart's Highway Hazard
- Coronary Arteries: Occlusion → ischemia/infarction.
- Left Coronary Artery (LCA):
- LAD (Anterior Interventricular): Ant. LV wall, apex, ant. 2/3 IVS. 📌 "Widow maker".
- LCX (Circumflex): Lat. & post. LV walls.
- Right Coronary Artery (RCA):
- RV, RA, SA node (
60%), AV node (80-90%). - PDA (Posterior Interventricular): Inf. wall, post. 1/3 IVS (right dom.).
- RV, RA, SA node (
- Left Coronary Artery (LCA):
- Coronary Dominance: Determines PDA origin.
- Right: ~85% (PDA from RCA).
- Left: ~15% (PDA from LCX).
- Vulnerability: Subendocardium: most vulnerable.

⭐ LAD occlusion is most common, affecting anterior LV wall & anterior 2/3 IVS.
Stroke (CVA): Anatomy - Brain's Blood Block
- Core Concept: Interruption of blood supply to brain → neuronal death.
- Arterial Supply: Primarily via two pairs of arteries:
- Internal Carotid Arteries (ICAs) → Anterior circulation (ACA, MCA)
- Vertebral Arteries → Basilar Artery → Posterior circulation (PCA)
- These systems connect via the Circle of Willis at the brain's base.
- Key Arteries & Territories:
- ACA: Medial frontal & parietal lobes; leg/foot motor/sensory.
- MCA: Lateral cerebral hemispheres; face/arm motor/sensory, speech areas (dominant hemisphere).
- PCA: Occipital lobe, thalamus, midbrain.
- Lenticulostriate arteries (from MCA): Basal ganglia, internal capsule (common for lacunar infarcts).
- Watershed Zones: Areas between major arterial territories, vulnerable to hypoperfusion.
⭐ The Middle Cerebral Artery (MCA) is the most commonly occluded intracranial vessel in stroke.

Appendicitis: Anatomy - Gut's Grumpy Guest
- Origin: Worm-like (vermiform) diverticulum from posteromedial cecum, ~2 cm below ileocecal valve. Avg. length 6-9 cm.
- McBurney's Point: Surface landmark for appendix base; junction of lateral 1/3 & medial 2/3, line from ASIS to umbilicus.
- Common Positions:
- Retrocecal (~65%)
- Pelvic (~30%)
- Others: Subcecal, pre/post-ileal.
- Arterial Supply: Appendicular artery (branch of ileocolic artery).
- Venous Drainage: Appendicular vein to Superior Mesenteric Vein (SMV).
- Nerve Supply:
- Sympathetic (T10-T11): Initial visceral pain (umbilical).
- Somatic: Later localized pain (parietal peritoneum).
- Lymphatics: Ileocolic nodes.
- Histology: Rich in lymphoid tissue (GALT), prominent in youth.

⭐ The appendicular artery is an end artery; its occlusion rapidly leads to ischemia and gangrene.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- McBurney's point tenderness signifies appendicitis; located two-thirds from umbilicus to ASIS.
- Right shoulder pain in cholecystitis is referred via the phrenic nerve (C3-C5).
- Carpal tunnel syndrome involves median nerve compression under the flexor retinaculum.
- Sciatica often results from herniated intervertebral disc compressing L4-S3 nerve roots.
- Bell's palsy is idiopathic facial nerve (CN VII) paralysis causing unilateral facial droop.
- Axillary nerve injury (e.g., surgical neck of humerus fracture) causes deltoid weakness and regimental badge anesthesia.
- Erb's palsy (C5-C6 brachial plexus roots) results in a "waiter's tip" deformity of the upper limb.
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