Title: Anterior Abdominal Wall Applied Anatomy
1Anterior Abdominal WallApplied Anatomy
Dr. S. M. AL SALAMAH B.Sc, MBBS, FRCS
Associate Prof. Consultant General Surgeon
Dept of Surgery, College of Medicne, KSU.
2- Abdominal wall divided into-
- ? Anteriolateral abdominal wall
- Anterior wall
- Right lateral wall (Right Flank)
- Left lateral wall (Left Flank)
- ? Posterior abdominal wall
3Antrolateral Abdominal Wall
- This extended from the thoracic cage to the
pelvis and bounded - Superiorly
- 7th through 10th costal cartilages and and
xiphoid process - Inferiorly
- Inguinal ligaments and the pelvic bones.
-
- The wall consists of skin, subcutaneous tissues
(fat), muscles, deep fascia and parietal
peritoneum.
4Antrolateral Abdominal Wall Fascia
Subcutaneous Tissues
- The subcutaneous tissues over most of the wall
consists of layer of connective tissues that
contains a variable amount of fat. - In the inferior part of the wall , the
subcutaneous tissue is composed of two layers - Fatty superficial layer (Campers fascia)
- Membranous deep layer (Scarpas fascia)
5Antrolateral Abdominal Wall Muscles
- 3 Flat Muscles with strong sheet like aponeuroses
- External Oblique
- Internal Oblique
- Transversus Abdominus
- 2 Vertical Muscles
- Rectus Abdomius
- Pyramidalis
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9Antrolateral Abdominal Wall Nerves
- T7 T11 Thoracoabdominal Nerves
- T12 Sub-costal nerve
- L1 Ilio-hypogastric Nerve
- Ilio inguinal Nerves
10Antrolateral Abdominal Wall Arteries
- Internal Thoracic Artery
- Superior Epigastric Artery
- External Iliac Artery
- Inferior Epigastric Artery
- Deep Circumflex Iliac Artery
- Femoral Artery
- Superfecial Epigastric Artery
- Superfecial Circumflex Artery
11Applied Anatomy
- Abdomen is divided into 9 regions via four
planes - Two horizontal sub-costal (10th) and trans
tubercules plane (L5). - Two vertical (midclavicular planes).
- They help in localization of abdominal signs and
symptoms
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13Anterior Abdominal WallFunctions
- Form strong expandable support.
- Protect the abdominal viscera from injury such as
low below in boxing - Compress the abdominal content
- Helps to maintain or increase the intraabdominal
pressure. - Move the trunk and help to maintain posture.
14- Protuberance of the abdomen. The five common
causes (5F) - Fat, Faeces, Fetus, Flatus And Fluid
- Abdominal Hernias
- Anteriolateral abdominal wall may be the site of
hernias - Inguinal, umbilical and epigastric regions
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16Posterior Abdominal Wall
- Lumbar vertebrae and IV discs.
- Muscles
- Psoas, quadratus lumborum, iliacus, transverse,
abdominal wall oblique muscles. - Lumbar plexus
- Ventral rami of lumbar spinal nerves.
- Fascia
- Diaphragm
- Contributing to the superior part of the
posterior wall - Fat, nerves, vessels (IVC, aorta) and lymph
nodes.
17Posterior Abdominal WallFascia
- Between the parital peritoneum and the muscles
- The psoas fascia or psoas sheath.
- The quadratus lumborum fascia.
- The thoracolumbar fascia.
18Posterior Abdominal WallMuscles
- Three paired muscles
- Psoas major
- Iliacus
- Quadratus Lumborum
19Posterior Abdominal WallNerves
- Somatic nerves
- ?The sub costal nerves
- ?The lumbar nerves
- ?The lumbar plexus of nerves branchus are
- (a) The obturator nerves (L2 L4)
- (b) The femoral nerves (L2 through
L4) - (c) Ilio inguinal and ilio
hypogastric nerves (L1) - (d) Gentio femoral (L1 L2)
- (e) Lateral femoral cutaneous nerves (L2
L3)
20Posterior Abdominal WallNerves
- Autonomic nerves
- One cranial nerve (the vagus)
- Several different splanchnic nerves that deliver
presynaptic sympathizer and parasympathetic
fibers to the plexus and sympathetic ganglia.
21Posterior Abdominal WallNerves
- Sympathetic Nerves
- ? Abdomino-pelvic splanchic N. from the
thoracic and abdominal sympathetic trunks - ? Prevertebral sympathetic ganglia
- ? Periarterial plexus
- ? Abdominal autonomic plexus
- ? Celiac plexus
- ? Superior mensentric plexus
- ? Inferior mensentric plexus.
- ? Celiac plexus
- ? Superior hypogastric plexus
- ? Inferior hypogastric plexus
22Posterior Abdominal WallBlood Vessels
- Aorta and its branches
- IVC and its tributeries
23Applied Anatomy
- Posterior abdominal pain
-
- Ilio-psoas has relationship to kidney, ureters,
caecum, appendix, colon, pancreas.etc. - When any of these structures is diseased
- movement of the ilio psoas usually causes pain.
- When intra abdominal inflammation is suspected
the Ilio Psoas Test performed by moving ileopsoas
muscle and if positive if it causes pain.
24Psoas Abscess
- Hematogenous spread to the lumbar vertebrae may
form an abscess which may spread from the
vertebrae into the Psoas sheath producing a Psoas
abscess.
25Partial Lumbar Sympethectomy
- Some patients with arterial disease in the lower
limbs (ischaemia) may include partial lumbar
sympathectomy by removal of two or more lumbar
sympathetic ganglia
26IVC Obstruction
- Three collateral routs formed by valveless
veins of the trunk are available for venus blood
to return to the heart. -
- ? inferior epigastric vein
- ? superficial epigastric vein
- ? epidural venous plexus inside the vertebral
column.
27Abdominal Incisions
- Definition incision defined as cut made with
knife for surgical purposes.
28Types of Incisions
- The vertical incisions
- ? Midline incision
- ? Para median
- The transverse abdominal incisions
- ? Upper and lower transverse incision
- ? Pfannenstiel incision
- ? LANZ incision (appendectomy)
- The oblique abdominal incisions
- ? The subcostal or Kochers incision
- ? Rutherford Morison incision
- ? McBurney incision (appendicectomy)
- The thoracolumbar incisions
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30Applied Anatomy
- The correct diagnosis will enable the surgeon to
choose the correct incision. - But laparotomy for undiagnosed abdominal disease
is most usefully approached through vertical
incision equidistant above and below the
umbilicus - Once the diagnosis confirmed, the incision may be
enlarged in an upward or downward direction.
31Choosing the Incision
- Choice of incision depends on many factors these
includes- - The organs to be investigated
- The type of surgery to be preformed
- Whether speed is an essential consideration
- The build of the patient
- The degree of obesity
- The presence of previous abdominal incisions
32Closing the Incision
- The ideal method of abdominal wound closure has
not been discovered. - However it should be free from complications
such as- - Burst abdomen
- Incisional hernia
- Persistent sinuses
- It should be comfortable to the patient
- Should leave reasonably good scar
33Incisional Hernia
- It is a protrusion of omentum or organ through
surgical incision. - If the muscles and aponeurotic layers of the
abdomen doesnt heal properly an incisional
hernia can result - Prredisposing factors include
- Infection
- bowel obstruction
- obesity
34Abdominal Hernia Orifices
- Hernia is defined as the protrusion of an organ
through its containing wall. It can occur
because of - Normal weakness found in everyone and related to
anatomy of the area e.g., place where vessel or
viscus enters or leaves the abdomen, muscles fail
to overlap or there is only scar tissue
(Umbilicus) - Abnormal weakness caused by congenital
abnormality or acquired as result of trauma or
diseases. - High intraabdominal pressure from Coughing /
Strains / Abdominal distention
35Common Sites
- ? Inguinal Hernia
- ? Umbilical Hernia
- ? Femoral Hernia
- ? Incisional Hernia
- Less common Hernia
- ? Epigastric Hernia
- ? Recurrent Hernia
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37Common Clinical Features
- The features of all hernias are
-
- ? They occur at weak spot
- ? They reduce on lying down or with direct
pressure - ? They have an expansile cough impulse
38History
- History is very important
- Age Occurs at all ages may be present at
birth or appear suddenly at any age. - Occupation
- Local symptoms Discomfort and pain the
commonest - Systemic symptoms
- If the hernia obstructing the patient has
cardinal symptoms of intestinal obstructions
(colicky abdominal pain, vomiting, abdominal
distension, constipation)
39Examination
- Ask the patient to stand up and look to the
site of the Lump (inspection) and ask the
patient to cough look for cough impulse, if
positive or negative. - Then palpitate the lump and whether its
reducible or not.
40Complications
- Untreated hernia may develop following
complications - (a) intestinal obstruction
- (b) strangulation
- (c) incarceration
41Perop or Post op Complications
- (a) Haemorrhage haematoma formation
- (b) Bowel injuries
- (c) Wound infections
- (d) Recurrent of Hernia
42Inguinal Hernia
- Anatomy of inguinal region
- Inguinal canal with boundaries, contents and
orifices - Types
- Treatment
- Clinical aspect
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44- Indirect inguinal hernia pass via deep inguinal
ring along the canal then if large enough emerges
through the external ring and descends into
scrotum. - Direct hernia pushes through the posterior wall
of the inguinal canal via Hesselbechs triangle,
which is boundary base inguinal ligament medial
border midline laterally by inferior epigastric
vessels. - However, the inferior epigastric vessels
demarcate the indirect hernia sac pass lateral
and direct hernia medial to these vessel.
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