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The sternum (from Greek στέρνον, sternon, "chest") or breastbone is a long, flat bone located in the center of the thorax (chest). It connects to the rib bones via cartilage, forming the rib cage with them, and thus helps to protect the lungs, heart and major blood vessels from physical trauma. Image File history File links Download high resolution version (526x650, 34 KB)From Grays Anatomy Anterior surface of sternum and costa cartilages. ...
The costal cartilages are bars of hyaline cartilage which serve to prolong the ribs forward and contribute very materially to the elasticity of the walls of the thorax. ...
Image File history File links Gray116. ...
Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) is a huge controlled vocabulary (or metadata system) for the purpose of indexing journal articles and books in the life sciences. ...
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Grays Anatomy illustration of a human femur. ...
Chest of a human male The chest is a part of the anatomy of humans and various other animals. ...
The human rib cage. ...
Cartilage is a type of dense connective tissue. ...
This article is about the bones called ribs. ...
The heart and lungs (from an older edition of Grays Anatomy) The lung is an organ belonging to the respiratory system and interfacing to the circulatory system of air-breathing vertebrates. ...
The heart and lungs, from an older edition of Grays Anatomy. ...
In medicine, a trauma patient has suffered serious and life-threatening physical injury resulting in secondary complications such as shock, respiratory failure and death. ...
The sternum is sometimes cut open (a median sternotomy) to gain access to the thoracic contents when performing cardiothoracic surgery. Median sternotomy is a surgical procedure in which a vertical inline incision is made along the sternum, after which the sternum itself is divided, or cracked. This procedure provides access to the heart and lungs for surgical procedures such as heart transplant, corrective surgery for congenital heart defects (CHDs...
Overview The sternum is an elongated, flattened bone, forming the middle portion of the anterior wall of the thorax. Its upper end supports the clavicles (Collar bones), and its margins articulate with the cartilages of the first seven pairs of ribs. Its top is also connected to the Sternocleidomastoid muscle. It consists of three parts, from above downward: In anatomy, the clavicle or collar bone is a bone that makes up part of the shoulder girdle. ...
In human anatomy, the sternocleidomastoid (pronounced ) muscles are muscles in the neck that act to flex and rotate the head. ...
In early life, the body of sternum consists of four segments or sternebrœ. Sternum or breastbone is a long, flat bone located in the center of the thorax (chest). ...
The body of the sternum (gladiolus), considerably lengthier, narrower, and thinner than the manubrium, attains its greatest breadth close to the lower end. ...
The xiphoid process is a small cartilaginous extension to the lower part of the sternum which is usually ossified in the adult human. ...
In its natural position, the inclination of the bone is oblique from above, downward and forward. It is slightly convex in front and concave behind; broad above, becoming narrowed at the point where the manubrium joins the body, after which it again widens a little to below the middle of the body, and then narrows to its lower extremity. Its average length in the adult is about 17 cm, and is rather longer in the male than in the female. A centimetre (American spelling centimeter, symbol cm) is a unit of length that is equal to one hundredth of a metre, the current SI base unit of length. ...
Structure The sternum is composed of highly vascular cancellous tissue, covered by a thin layer of compact bone which is thickest in the manubrium between the articular facets for the clavicles.
Articulations The sternum articulates on either side with the clavicle and upper seven costal cartilages. The costal cartilages are bars of hyaline cartilage which serve to prolong the ribs forward and contribute very materially to the elasticity of the walls of the thorax. ...
Fractures of the sternum Fractures of the sternum are not common. However, they may result from trauma, such as when a driver's chest is forced into the steering column of a car in a car accident. A fracture of the sternum is usually a comminuted fracture, meaning it is broken into pieces. The most common site of sternal fractures is at the sternal angle. This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Minor collisions such as this one are the most common type of crash. ...
A bone fracture is a medical condition in which a bone becomes cracked, splintered, or bisected as a result of physical trauma. ...
The sternal angle is the angle formed by the junction of the manubrium and the body of the sternum. ...
Additional images Thoracic cage Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
| References This article was originally based on an entry from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy. As such, some of the information contained herein may be outdated. Please edit the article if this is the case, and feel free to remove this notice when it is no longer relevant. The public domain comprises the body of all creative works and other knowledge—writing, artwork, music, science, inventions, and others—in which no person or organization has any proprietary interest. ...
An illustration from the 1918 edition Henry Grays Anatomy of the Human Body, commonly known as Grays Anatomy after Henry Gray, is an anatomy textbook widely regarded as a classic work on human anatomy. ...
- Clinically Oriented Anatomy, 4th ed. Keith L. Moore and Arthur F. Dalley. pp. 66-68.
See also | v • d • e Bones of torso | | sternum: manubrium, body of sternum, xiphoid process, suprasternal notch rib: first rib, tenth rib, eleventh rib, twelfth rib, floating rib, false ribs, angle, tubercle, costal groove, neck, head Figure 4 : Ossification of the sternum. ...
Grays Anatomy illustration of a human femur. ...
In zootomy, several terms are used to describe the location of organs and other structures in the body of bilateral animals. ...
Pectus carinatum, also called pigeon chest, is a deformity of the chest characterized by a protrusion of the sternum. ...
Pectus excavatum is a congenital deformity (present at birth) that causes the sternum to be depressed into the chest causing a caved-in or sunken look. ...
Grays Anatomy illustration of a human femur. ...
The human torso Torso is an anatomical term for the greater part of the human body without the head and limbs. ...
Sternum or breastbone is a long, flat bone located in the center of the thorax (chest). ...
The body of the sternum (gladiolus), considerably lengthier, narrower, and thinner than the manubrium, attains its greatest breadth close to the lower end. ...
The xiphoid process is a small cartilaginous extension to the lower part of the sternum which is usually ossified in the adult human. ...
This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
The human rib cage. ...
The first rib is the most curved and usually the shortest of all the ribs; it is broad and flat, its surfaces looking upward and downward, and its borders inward and outward. ...
The tenth rib has only a single articular facet on its head. ...
The eleventh rib has a single articular facet on the head, which is of rather large size. ...
The twelfth rib has a single articular facet on the head, which is of rather large size. ...
the four floating ribs Four of the ribs (two pairs) in the ribcage are said to be floating ribs because they are attached to the vertebrae only, and not to the sternum or cartilage coming off of the sternum. ...
Excluding the first seven ribs, the remaining five are false ribs. ...
The external surface of the rib is convex, smooth, and marked, a little in front of the tubercle, by a prominent line, directed downward and laterally; this gives attachment to a tendon of the Iliocostalis, and is called the angle. ...
On the posterior surface at the junction of the neck and body of the rib, and nearer the lower than the upper border, is an eminenceâthe tubercle It consists of an articular and a non-articular portion. ...
Between the ridge of the interal surface of the rib and the inferior border is a groove, the costal groove, for the intercostal vessels and intercostal nerve. ...
The neck of the rib is the flattened portion which extends lateralward from the head; it is about 2. ...
The head of the rib is marked by a kidney-shaped articular surface, divided by a horizontal crest into two facets for articulation with the depression formed on the bodies of two adjacent thoracic vertebrae; the upper facet is the smaller; to the crest is attached the interarticular ligament. ...
general vertebral structures: body of vertebra, vertebral arch (pedicle, lamina, vertebral notch), foramina (vertebral, intervertebral), processes (transverse, articular, spinous) The body is the largest part of a vertebra, and is more or less cylindrical in shape. ...
The vertebral arch (or neural arch) is the posterior part of a vertebra. ...
The pedicles are two short, thick processes, which project backward, one on either side, from the upper part of the body, at the junction of its posterior and lateral surfaces. ...
The laminæ are two broad plates directed backward and medialward from the pedicles. ...
The concavities above and below the pedicles are named the vertebral notches; and when the vertebrae are articulated, the notches of each contiguous pair of bones form the intervertebral foramina. ...
In a typical vertebra, the vertebral foramen is the foramen formed by the anterior segment (the body), and the posterior part, the vertebral arch. ...
When the spinal vertebrae are articulated with each other the bodies form a strong pillar for the support of the head and trunk, and the vertebral foraminae constitute a canal for the protection of the medulla spinalis (spinal cord). ...
The transverse processes of a vertebra, two in number, project one at either side from the point where the lamina joins the pedicle, between the superior and inferior articular processes. ...
The articular processes of a vertebra, two superior and two inferior, spring from the junctions of the pedicles and laminæ. The superior project upward, and their articular surfaces are directed more or less backward; the inferior project downward, and their surfaces look more or less forward. ...
A diagram of a thoracic vertebra. ...
cervical vertebrae: C1 (anterior arch, posterior arch, lateral mass), C2 (dens), C7, anterior tubercle, posterior tubercle, foramen transversarium In vertebrates, cervical vertebrae (singular: vertebra) are those vertebrae immediately behind (caudal to) the skull. ...
In anatomy, the atlas (C1) is the topmost (first) cervical vertebra of the spine. ...
The anterior arch of the atlas forms about one-fifth of the ring of the atlas: its anterior surface is convex, and presents at its center the anterior tubercle for the attachment of the Longus colli muscles; posteriorly it is concave, and marked by a smooth, oval or circular facet...
In a cervical vertebra, the posterior arch forms about two-fifths of the circumference of the ring: it ends behind in the posterior tubercle, which is the rudiment of a spinous process and gives origin to the Recti capitis posteriores minores. ...
The lateral masses are the most bulky and solid parts of the atlas, in order to support the weight of the head. ...
In anatomy, the second cervical vertebra (C2) of the spine is named the axis or epistropheus. ...
The dens or odontoid process of the axis exhibits a slight constriction or neck, where it joins the body. ...
The most distinctive characteristic of the seventh cervical vertebra is the existence of a long and prominent spinous process, hence the name vertebra prominens. ...
The anterior arch forms about one-fifth of the ring: its anterior surface is convex, and presents at its center the anterior tubercle for the attachment of the Longus colli muscles. ...
The posterior arch of a cervical vertebra forms about two-fifths of the circumference of the ring: it ends behind in the posterior tubercle, which is the rudiment of a spinous process and gives origin to the Recti capitis posteriores minores. ...
The transverse processes of the cervical vertebrae are each pierced by the foramen transversarium, which, in the upper six vertebræ, gives passage to the vertebral artery and vein and a plexus of sympathetic nerves. ...
thoracic vertebrae: costal facets (superior, inferior, transverse) A typical thoracic vertebra The thoracic vertebrae (vertebrae thoracales) compose the middle segment of the vertebral column, between the cervical vertebrae and the lumbar vertebrae. ...
The superior costal facet (or superior costal fovea) is a site where a rib forms a joint with the top of a vertebra. ...
The inferior costal facet (or inferior costal fovea) is a site where a rib forms a joint with the bottom of a vertebra. ...
The transverse costal facet (or transverse costal fovea) is a site where a rib forms a joint with the transverse process of a vertebra. ...
lumbar vertebrae: accessory process, mammillary process Categories: Anatomy stubs | Anatomy ...
Of the tubercles noticed in connection with the transverse processes of the lower thoracic vertebrae, the inferior is situated at the back part of the base of the transverse process, and is called the accessory process. ...
Of the three tubercles noticed in connection with the transverse processes of the lower thoracic vertebrae, the superior one is connected in the lumbar region with the back part of the superior articular process, and is named the mammillary process. ...
sacrum/coccyx: pelvic surface (anterior sacral foramina, dorsal surface (posterior sacral foramina, median sacral crest, medial sacral crest, lateral sacral crest), lateral surface, base, sacral hiatus For the record label, see Sacrum Torch The sacrum is a large, triangular bone at the base of the spine and at the upper and back part of the pelvic cavity, where it is inserted like a wedge between the two hip bones. ...
The coccyx is formed of four fused vertebrae. ...
The pelvic surface of sacrum is concave from above downward, and slightly so from side to side. ...
At the ends of the transverse ridges of the pelvic surface of the sacrum are seen the anterior sacral foramina (or pelvic sacral foramina), four in number on either side, somewhat rounded in form, diminishing in size from above downward, and directed lateralward and forward; they give exit to the...
The dorsal surface of sacrum is convex and narrower than the pelvic. ...
Lateral to the articular processes of the sacrum are the four posterior sacral foramina (or dorsal sacral foramina); they are smaller in size and less regular in form than the anterior, and transmit the posterior divisions of the sacral nerves. ...
In the middle line of the dorsal surface of the sacrum, it displays a crest, the median sacral crest, surmounted by three or four tubercles, the rudimentary spinous processes of the upper three or four sacral vertebrae. ...
On the lateral aspect of the sacral groove is a linear series of tubercles produced by the fusion of the articular processes which together form the indistinct medial sacral crest (intermediate sacral crest, sacral articular crest). ...
On the lateral side of the posterior sacral foramina is a series of tubercles, which represent the transverse processes of the sacral vertebrae, and form the lateral sacral crest. ...
The lateral surface of sacrum is broad above, but narrowed into a thin edge below. ...
The base of the sacrum, which is broad and expanded, is directed upward and forward. ...
The laminae of the fifth sacral vertebra, and sometimes those of the fourth, fail to meet behind, and thus a sacral hiatus or deficiency occurs in the posterior wall of the sacral canal. ...
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