Talk:Book - Buchanan's Manual of Anatomy including Embryology 1
Buchanan’s Manual Of Anatomy
Including Embryology
Sixth Edition
Edited By
J E. Frazer, D.Sc., F.R.C.S.
Professor Of Anatomy, University Of London; Lecturer In Anatomy, St. Mary’s Hospital; Examiner In Anatomy To The University Of London, And Formerly Examiner At Cambridge, Durham And Oxford, And To The Royal College Of Surgeons
London
Bailliere, Tindall And Cox
PREFACE TO SIXTH EDITION
The necessity for a new edition of this Manual has afforded the opportunity of bringing its terminology into line with other English textbooks.
The old English nomenclature, which has been used in the book from
the first, is therefore replaced by the new Birmingham Revision
throughout—except to some extent in the Embryological Section.
For many years the student will come across the terms of yesterday in his clinical and other textbooks and papers. For this reason, and because he should not be cut off from the advantage of study of the great teachers of past times, it has been considered necessary to introduce as subsidiaries the more common and popular terms used up to the present; having been once mentioned, they are not as a rule employed again. Other terms of such sort, particularly those connected with proper names, can be found in the Glossary. Otherwise there have been general revision of the text, some rearrangement, a small amount of new matter inserted, and a number of new illustrations added.
I am indebted to Mr. T. K. Elliott for the greater part of the change of terminology and for the Index, and to the Publishers for their unfailing readiness and help in all the questions concerned in the production of this edition.
J. E. FRAZER.
London,
February, 1937.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER ' I'AC.E
I. Terminology and Relative Positions ..... i
II. General Embryology ........ 8
THE ANIMAL CELL ......... 8
CELL-DIVISION ......... 9
GERM-CELLS . ......... 12
FERTILIZATION OF OVUM ....... 20
DEVELOPMENT OF OVUM . . . . . . .26
EMBRYONIC DEVELOPMENT ....... 33
BROAD OUTLINES OF ORGANOGENY ...... 53
INTRA-UTERINE CONDITIONS . . . . , , . IO4
GENERAL GROWTH . . . . . . . . IIO
III. Osteology . . . . . . . . . .113
INTRODUCTORY . . . . . . . . . II3
IV. Bones of Trunk ......... 125
VERTEBRAL COLUMN . . . . . . . 125
RIBS AND CARTILAGES . . . . . . , -154
STERNUM . . . . . . . . . .160
THORAX AS A WHOLE ........ 165
DEVELOPMENT OF TRUNK BONES . . . . . 167
V. Bones of Head . . . . . . . . .172
occipital . . . . . . . . . .172
THE MAXILL.E . . . . . . . . 2 JI
HYOID . . . . . . . . . . .235
SKULL AS A WHOLE . . . . . . . .237
REGIONS .......... 242
INTERIOR OF CRANIUM ........ 259
FCETAL SKULL ......... 265
RACIAL PECULIARITIES ........ 268
DEVELOPMENT OF SKULL ....... 270
TEETH, WITH DEVELOPMENT ....... 278
VI. Bones of Upper Limb ........ 289
VII. Bones of Lower Limb ........ 334
hip bone .......... 334
THE PELVIS ......... 342
FEMUR .......... 345
LEG AND FOOT . . . . . . . • *355
vii
viii TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE
VIII. Joints ........... 392
GENENA 1 .......... 392
IX. The Upper Limb ......... 397
back . .......... 397
PECTORAL REGION . . . . . .. . 412
AXILLA . . . . . . . , . .422
ARM . .......... 446
SHOULDER-JOINT ......... 461
FOREARM AND HAND ........ 465
DEVELOPMENT AND MORPHOLOGY . . . . . -515
JOINTS.516
X. Lower Limb .......... 529
GLUTEAL REGION . . . . . . . , .529
BACK OF THIGH ......... 540
FRONT AND INNER SIDE OF THIGH ...... 551
HIP-JOINT.590
LEG ••••••«.... 598
KNEE-JOINT .......... 628
SOLE OF FOOT.64 1
TIBIO-FIBULAR JOINTS ........ 659
XI. The Abdomen ......... 674
PERINEUM.674
ABDOMINAL WALL ......... 704
INGUINAL HERNIA ......... 745
ABDOMINAL CAVITY ........ 754
INTESTINAL STRUCTURE ........ 856
DEVELOPMENTAL POSITIONS ....... 874
LIVER AND OTHER VISCERA ....... 884
MALE PELVIS.^4
FEMALE PELVIS ......... 965
PELVTC ARTICULATIONS ....... 988
XII. The Thorax. 994
WALL .......... 994
THORACIC CAVITY ......... 1002
MEDIASTINUM ......... IOTI
HEART .......... IO48
DEVELOPMENT . . . . . . . . . TO73
OTHER CONTENTS ......... 1085
VERTEBRAL JOINTS. lI0 5
JOINTS OF RIBS, COSTAL CARTILAGES, AND STERNUM . . ITIO
TABLE OF CONTENTS
IX
CHAPTER l'AGE
XIII. Development of Vascular Systems . . . . .1116
PRINCIPAL ARTERIES AND VEINS . . . . . . IIl6
PRINCIPAL VEINS . . . . . . . . II23
INFERIOR VENA CAVA ........ II33
LYMPHATIC SYSTEM . . . . . . . .II37
XIV. The Head and Neck ........ 1141
BACK OF SCALP AND NECK . . . . . . . II4T
SCALP AND TEMPORAL REGION ...... II53
BASAL PART OF CRANIAL CAVITY . . . . . . 1162
SIDE OF THE NECK . . . . . . . . II7I
CONTENTS OF ORBIT ........ I247
FACE . .......... 1263
TEMPORAL AND INFRATEMPORAL REGIONS .... I3OI
DEEP DISSECTION OF NECK ....... 1 323
MOUTH CAVITY ......... 1335
NASAL CAVITY ......... I356
%
rilARYNX .......... 1366
DEVELOPMENT ......... 1373
LARYNX .......... 1379
PREVERTEBRAL MUSCLES . . . . . . . 1397
JOINTS OF ATLAS, AXIS, AND OCCIPITAL BONE . . . I4O4
XV. The Nervous System . . . . . . . .1410
SPINAL CORD ......... 1410
EXTERNAL CHARACTERS . . . . . . . I416
INTERNAL STRUCTURE ....... I42O
DEVELOPMENT ......... I436
encephalon: parts ........ 1442
SUPERFICIAL ORIGINS OF CRANIAL NERVES .... 1 446
rhombencephalon: medulla . . . . . .1451
PONS .......... 1468
CEREBELLUM ......... 1475
THE FOURTH VENTRICLE ....... I488
telencephalon: hemispheres ...... 1493
OLFACTORY LOBE AND RHINENCEPHALON . . . . I5IO
LATERAL VENTRICLE . . . . . . . 1522
BASAL GANGLIA ........ I 5 26
THIRD VENTRICLE ........ 1533
MESENCEPHALON ........ 1547
STRUCTURE OF CEREBRAL HEMISPHERES .... 1561
VESSELS JO F ENCEPHALON ...... I57O
DEVELOPMENT OF ENCEPHALON . . . . . . 1581
DEVELOPMENT OF PERIPHERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM . . 1597
X
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER
XV. The Nervous System ( continued )
MENINGES OF ENCEPHALON CRANIAL NERVES CRANIO-CEREBRAL TOPOGRAPHY AUTONOMIC SYSTEM .
XVI. The Eye ....
COATS ....
REFRACTING MEDIA DEVELOPMENT
XVII. The Ear ....
EXTERNAL EAR .
MIDDLE EAR INTERNAL EAR MEMBRANOUS LABYRINTH DEVELOPMENT OF EAR
GLOSSARY ....
PACK
1593
l6lO
1629
1634
I64I
I64I
l66l
I664
I67I
I67I
1673
I683
I687
1694
I698
INDEX
I7I4
A MANUAL OF ANATOMY
CHAPTER I
TERMINOLOGY AND RELATIVE POSITIONS
The word anatomy, used in the strict sense, implies the knowledge of what can be studied by the process of dissection. Morphology is the name given to the more scientific aspect of anatomical research —the reason why, and the method by which, the various anatomical structures have reached their present conditions. In modern times the term “anatomy” is frequently used in a wide general sense, covering both descriptive and morphological anatomy. Comparative anatomy, the structure of animals other than man, is an essential foundation for human morphology. Human embryology, the study of the development of the body, is an extension of direct anatomical investigation on the one hand, and on the other hand, particularly when the study of human and other types is carried on together, it is a second fundamental support for the superstructure of morphology. Histology, the examination and study by the microscope of the minute structure of tissues and organs, is microscopical anatomy, anatomical research pushed to the farthest visual limits of practical value.
Anatomy, the plain descriptive structure of the body, is a subject of primary importance to the medical man. If he wishes to understand what has happened—either from injury or disease—to produce some abnormal physical condition, he must first know the normal state; this knowledge is necessary for scientific diagnosis, and frequently for scientific treatment. Hence it comes that the well-equipped physician or surgeon possesses a good working knowledge of the anatomy of the body as well as of the functions of its parts, some information on morphology to give him a deeper understanding of the matter, and a sufficient acquaintance with histology and embryonic development to enable him to grasp more fully some of the pathological problems which he has to consider. It may be said here, for the benefit of those who are as yet students, with little or no clinical experience, that there are practically no items of anatomical information which may not be of value—to-morrow, if not to-day—if they are known; their value cannot be apparent if they are not known. The more detailed the knowledge possessed by the practitioner, the more useful, and the more frequently useful, he will find it, and the firmer will be the standpoint from which he views the clinical problems before him.
The anatomy of the body must be studied on the actual human frame itself. It may be pointed out in this connection that dissection and investigation of the dead body ought to be amplified by study of the living body where this is practicable. Textbooks on anatomy must be looked on as mere explanatory guides to actual anatomy, as summaries and co-ordinations of what is observed during this actual study, and as convenient references when occasion arises; they must not be considered to be anatomy itself.
The descriptions of anatomical findings, whether in a book or as
Fig. i. Human Figure to illustrate the ‘ Formal Position ’ of Anatomy.
The diagram on the right is a section through the trunk to show planes, etc.
For description refer to text.
the record of some investigation, must rest on certain fixed and recognized foundations. Unless this rule is respected the anatomical description, which ought to be absolutely exact and unmistakable, becomes chaotic and misleading. One of the first things that the student of anatomy must learn and understand is the proper use and meaning of terms of position; these have fixed and definite values, and should
never be used in any other sense than those recognized by anatomists
as correct.
In the first place, the body, for purposes of description , is always supposed to be standing upright (Fig. i), with the arms by the side, the palms looking forward, and fingers straight, and the legs and feet
TERMINOLOGY AND RELATIVE POSITIONS
3
close together and fully extended. This is the * formal position *
of anatomy, and the description of any part or organ is always put into
language applicable to this formal position, whatever may be the
actual position of the body during dissection, or during the progress
of the description. The body is not lying on its back, or in any other
dissection position, when it is being spoken about, but is supposed to
be standing up. This mental adoption of the formal position must be
understood thoroughly by the student if the statements he hears and
reads are to be intelligible to him.
The position of the body for descriptive purposes being fixed, it is now possible to employ fixed terms of relative position which will always have the same meaning, whatever may be the actual position of the body at the moment. These fixed terms deal with the three dimensions in space, and are therefore six in number; variants exist for many of the terms, but this does not, of course, increase the number of meanings implied. The terms are: Superior and inferior, anterior and posterior, medial and lateral. Their use and meaning can be illustrated and understood in this way. In Fig. i are shown two points, A and B; one of them is higher than the other when the body is in the formal position, so it is said to be above or superior to the other, which is inferior to it or below it. Again, it can be seen that A is not directly above B, but is nearer the middle line of the body, so that it is not only above, but is medial to B, which is lateral to it. It is very important to recognize that these terms refer to nearness or distance from the median plane of the body, and have nothing to do with the middle line of any of its parts, such as a limb; for example, of the two points C, D on the arm of the figure, C is medial to D because it is nearer the middle line of the body when in the formal position, whereas it is farther away than D from the middle of the limb. The transverse section of the trunk in Fig. i shows two points, E and F; of these, E is nearer the posterior surface of the body than F, so is said to be behind or posterior to it, and F is in front of or anterior to E. This is, of course, in addition to the medial and lateral relations they evidently possess also.
The fixed terms of relative position, then, refer to the formal position of the body, and their meanings can be shortly stated as follows:
Above : nearer to the top of the head.
Below : nearer to the soles of the feet.
Medial: nearer to the median plane of the body.
Lateral : farther from the median plane of the body.
Anterior : nearer to the front surface of the body.
Posterior : nearer to the posterior surface of the body.
Many synonymous terms are used in place of these, giving a variety of choice, but no difference in meaning; those in commonest use for medial and lateral are internal and external, and dorsal and ventral for posterior and anterior. Other descriptions have more limited applications; thus, cephalic and caudal are sometimes used to express
4 A MANUAL OF ANATOMY
nearness (on the trunk) to its upper or lower end, as the case may be; proximal and distal are employed in the limbs to signify a position nearer to, or farther from, the attachment to the trunk; volar or palmar is often used in place of anterior when dealing with the hand, and sometimes (though improperly) when speaking of the forearm; and plantar and dorsal, in the foot, imply nearer to the sole or the upper surface of the foot respectively.
It must be pointed out here that these fixed terms of position have a different signification when used in strict early embryological description. In this case the embryo is described in terms of comparative anatomy— i.e., it is considered as lying on its ventral surface on the ovum; its dorsal surface is now above, its head end is in front, with corresponding changes in the meanings of below and behind. Medial and lateral remain as before, referring to relation to the median longitudinal plane. This strict embryological usage is only adopted as a rule, so far as human description is concerned, during the earlier embryonic period of development; after the third month, when the embryo is known as a foetus, it is usual to find the terms used in the adult sense.
In addition to the fixed terms there are two descriptive words, superficial and deep, which are not fixed in their meaning with regard to the whole body, but vary according to the way in which any part is dissected, looked at, or described. When used with proper care, to avoid doubt or confusion as to the meaning implied, they are terms of great descriptive value, and can frequently replace with advantage a more cumbrous employment of fixed terms. We can, for example, speak with much more convenience and brevity of the subcutaneous tissue as being deep to the skin than we would experience if we were to attempt to describe its relation to the skin all over the body by fixed terms. Speaking generally, the words superficial and deep a PPty fhy order in which things would be met with in the ordinary course of dissection from the nearest surface, but if there is any possibility of doubt as to what might be inferred from their use, the meaning should be defined clearly before proceeding further. It must be clearly understood that these terms, although in every case necessarily corresponding with some terms of fixed descriptive value, do not in each case necessarily correspond with the same terms, and they must never be used as if they possessed a fixed value of the same sort.
lhere can be no hesitation in repeating the assertion that the student must understand and become accustomed to the proper use these expressions of relative situation, and their application to the body m the formal position; otherwise he will find written descrip- tion apparently confused or even untrue, and he himself will not be able to give a clear and comprehensive account of any part he may wish o escribe. He must get rid of the tendency to looseness in expression and meaning which is so commonly found in ordinary conversation, an ie must beware especially of thinking that any of the terms of fixed relation are synonymous with expressions of superficiality or depth.
TERMINOLOGY AND RELATIVE POSITIONS
5
There are many words and expressions commonly used in anatomical science, but otherwise unfamiliar. A large number of these have
a definite topographical application, and will be considered in the
appropriate places; but others have more general reference, and may
be dealt with conveniently in this chapter.
Among the terms used to describe position or relation there are several which have not been noticed so far, and call for explanation.
Coronal and sagittal are terms referring to vertical planes in the body, transverse or antero-posterior respectively in disposition. In Fig. i two sagittal planes are indicated at S and T, and two coronal planes at X and Y. But a sagittal plane may be in any place so long as it passes directly from before backwards, and a coronal plane may be anywhere between the front and back walls so long as it is at right angles to the sagittal direction, and the planes illustrated are only some out of an innumerable number. It is evident that the median plane is only one of the series of sagittal planes.
Prone and supine are words occasionally used. The former, applied to the body as a whole, is practically the same as ' lying on its face,’ and the latter term implies its position ‘ on its back.’ The terms are most frequently used in speaking of the upper limb; the hand and forearm, when in the ' formal position,’ as in Fig. i, is said to be supinated, and it is pronated when turned over on to its front surface.
Preaxial and postaxial only apply to the limbs. The axis referred to is the axis of the limb. The lateral border of the arm is its preaxial border, the postaxial being its medial border. But in the lower limb the preaxial border begins at the lateral side of the upper end, crosses the thigh obliquely, and passes down the medial side of the leg and foot; the postaxial border passes down and out to the lateral side of the foot. These borders are only descriptively true in early development, when the limbs are plate-like, and project from the body with definite cranial and caudal borders. They come in to the side later, but in the case of the lower limb the plate is twisted inwards and ventrally, so that the original dorsal surface comes to look ventrally, and the cranial (preaxial) border is turned towards the middle line. The twist is completed when the legs are brought straight down.
Terms of General Application.
Normal is a word which, when applied to some condition, implies that it is the condition found in the majority of cases; it is frequently extended to cover common, though not most frequent, occurrences.
Abnormal, strictly speaking, means that the condition to which the word is applied is not that usually found. The term is often used as if it were synonymous with ‘ pathological ’ or ‘ monstrous.’ Such a mental limitation of the meaning of the word must be avoided; all monstrous conditions are abnormal, but all abnormalities are not to be classed as monstrous. Nevertheless, it must be admitted that it
6
A MANUAL OF ANATOMY
is very hard to draw a line of distinction when dealing with the more
extreme degrees of departure from the normal.
Typical is a word which signifies that the thing to which it refers is one possessing all the characteristics of the ‘ type ' to which it belongs. In practical use it implies almost the same thing as the use of the word ' normal/ but it is not quite the same; for a ‘ typical' example of some region, for instance, may not actually correspond with any particular or individual region known to the observer, but may be more like an average summing up of several known regions. Normality, on the other hand, is a word essentially applied to individual instances.
Atypical, then, merely implies some definite departure from the state recognized as typical.
In dealing with the relations of structures with one another, and with similar or related structures in other animals, etc., certain terms are in frequent use, and call for some explanation.
Structures are often said to be homologous. Homology expresses the relation between parts which own for their origin similar embryonic or evolutionary structures, as in the case of a man's arm and the wing of a bird or the foreleg of a dog. Homogeny is a word with practically the same meaning and use as homology , but has reference more to the evolutionary side of development; thus it can apparently be used to throw back the resemblances between structures further than actual embryonic observation would seem to justify. Homogeny must not be confounded with homogenesis , which is simply the name of the production of like from like, as in the case of one animal producing a similar animal; nor with homogeneity , the quality of being homogeneous , which is a word used to imply that the thing described has a uniform structure or substance. It may be pointed out here that probably nothing is absolutely uniform in its composition provided that sufficiently searching methods of examination are employed, and that ‘ homogeneousness ’ is therefore a term of only relative value.
Serial homology is the name given to the relation between parts which are developed from structures that may be described as units in a series of things essentially similar. Thus, each vertebra is ‘ serially homologous ’ with other vertebrae, and each hypothetical segment of the body is the serial homologue of any of the others.
Homodynamy expresses the relation between structures which owe their existence, or their form, to the influence of similar forces or the serving of similar functions. Thus the arm and leg are homodynamic or homodynamous, though they cannot be said to be homologous.
Terms used in dealing with the formation or evolution of the body include:
Atavistic.—This implies the reversion, in some structure, to some peculiarity of a more or less remote ancestor. It is used in various ways in description. Certain structures, as, for example, some epiphyses on bones, appear to be degenerated representatives of better formed and functional parts in other animal types, and are classed as atavistic, although they are parts of the normal skeleton. On the
TERMINOLOGY AND RELATIVE POSITIONS
7
other hand, the ' reappearance ’ of a structure normally absent in the
human body, though existing in other types, is referred rather vaguely
to ‘ atavism ’; the implications of such use of the term must not, however, be taken too strictly.
Phytogeny is the development of the body considered from an evolutionary standpoint, and has to do with the connection between human formation and that of types in or near the line of descent.
Ontogeny is the formation of the individual apart from his evolution. The ontogenetic development of an individual is, in a very general way, a recapitulation of his phylogenetic development, but any phylogenetic suggestions gained from ontogenetic study must be submitted to the tests of extended comparative embryological search before they can stand.
Other terms of more particular application will be explained as occasion arises.