Abdominal fascial planes

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Superficial Fascia - The Two-Faced Layer

  • A bilaminar structure inferior to the umbilicus, composed of two distinct layers.
  • Camper's Fascia: The superficial, fatty layer. Its thickness varies with body habitus.
  • Scarpa's Fascia: The deeper, membranous layer, which is continuous with other fascial planes.
    • Inferiorly, it fuses with the fascia lata of the thigh.
    • In the perineum, it continues as Colles' fascia.
    • In the scrotum, it contributes to the dartos fascia.

⭐ In a urethral rupture, urine can extravasate superiorly into the potential space between Scarpa's fascia and the deep abdominal muscle fascia.

Abdominal wall fascia and rectus sheath in sagittal view

Muscles & Rectus Sheath - The Abdominal Corset

Rectus sheath above and below arcuate line

  • Lateral Muscles (The "Corset"): Innervated by thoracoabdominal (T7-T11), subcostal (T12), & L1 nerves.

    • External Oblique: "Hands in pockets" fibers (inferomedial).
    • Internal Oblique: Fibers run superomedially.
    • Transversus Abdominis: Deepest; transverse fibers.
  • Anterior Muscle:

    • Rectus Abdominis: Primary trunk flexor; enclosed by the rectus sheath.
  • Rectus Sheath Composition: Varies above and below the arcuate line.

    • Above Arcuate Line: Anterior & posterior layers fully enclose the rectus muscle.
    • Below Arcuate Line: All three lateral muscle aponeuroses pass anterior to the rectus muscle. The posterior wall is deficient, leaving only the transversalis fascia.

⭐ The arcuate line is where the inferior epigastric vessels perforate the rectus abdominis. Below this line, the posterior rectus sheath is absent, creating a potential site for herniation.

Arcuate Line & Deep Layers - The Great Divide

  • Arcuate Line: A horizontal line marking the lower limit of the posterior rectus sheath, found roughly one-third of the way from the umbilicus to the pubic crest.

  • Composition Above Arcuate Line:

    • Anterior Wall: External oblique & anterior lamina of internal oblique.
    • Posterior Wall: Posterior lamina of internal oblique & transversus abdominis.
  • Composition Below Arcuate Line:

    • Anterior Wall: Aponeuroses of all 3 flat muscles pass anterior to the rectus abdominis.
    • Posterior Wall: Deficient. Rectus muscle is in direct contact with transversalis fascia.

⭐ Below the arcuate line, the inferior epigastric vessels enter the rectus sheath and are a source of bleeding in rectus sheath hematomas.

📌 Mnemonic: PASSPosterior Aponeurosis Stops Short.

Rectus Sheath Above and Below Arcuate Line

Clinical Spaces & Correlates - Danger Zones & Incisions

  • Rectus Sheath Hematoma: Accumulation of blood in the rectus sheath, often from epigastric artery rupture. Presents as a painful abdominal mass that does not cross the midline.
  • Spigelian Hernia: A rare ventral hernia through the Spigelian fascia, lateral to the rectus abdominis muscle at the semilunar line.
  • Surgical Incisions:
    • Midline: Through linea alba for rapid access.
    • Pfannenstiel: Transverse suprapubic incision for gynecologic/obstetric procedures; strong cosmetic results.

Cullen's & Grey Turner's Signs: Periumbilical (Cullen's) or flank (Grey Turner's) ecchymosis suggests retroperitoneal hemorrhage, as blood tracks along the transversalis and renal fascia.

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Camper's fascia is the superficial fatty layer; Scarpa's fascia is the deep membranous layer that limits fluid/pus spread.
  • The transversalis fascia is the primary layer deep to the abdominal muscles, forming the deep inguinal ring.
  • The arcuate line marks the lower limit of the posterior rectus sheath, a key landmark for hernias and hematomas.
  • The linea alba is a midline, avascular raphe, representing a common site for surgical incisions.
  • A psoas abscess can track from the thoracic spine down the psoas sheath to present as a groin mass.
  • Spigelian hernias occur along the semilunar line, lateral to the rectus abdominis muscle.

Practice Questions: Abdominal fascial planes

Test your understanding with these related questions

A 67-year-old woman is brought to the emergency department by her husband because of a 1-hour history of severe groin pain, nausea, and vomiting. She has had a groin swelling that worsens with standing, coughing, and straining for the past 3 months. Her pulse is 120/min. Examination shows pallor; there is swelling, erythema, and tenderness to palpation of the right groin that is centered below the inguinal ligament. The most likely cause of this patient's condition is entrapment of an organ between which of the following structures?

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Flashcards: Abdominal fascial planes

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What is the medial border of the inguinal (Hesselbach) triangle? _____

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

What is the medial border of the inguinal (Hesselbach) triangle? _____

Lateral border of rectus abdominis

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