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- Duration: 1:16
- Published: 14 Mar 2007
- Uploaded: 06 Jun 2011
- Author: nccanat
Coordinates | 50°58′″N16°55′″N |
---|---|
Name | thoracic vertebrae |
Latin | vertebrae thoracales |
Graysubject | 22 |
Graypage | 102 |
Caption | A typical thoracic vertebra |
Image2 | Gray82.png |
Caption2 | A typical thoracic vertebra, viewed from above. |
Meshname | Thoracic+Vertebrae |
Meshnumber | A02.835.232.834.892 |
By convention, the human thoracic vertebrae are numbered, with the first one (T1) located closest to the skull and higher numbered vertebrae (T2-T12) proceeding away from the skull and down the spine.
The bodies in the middle of the thoracic region are heart-shaped, and as broad in the antero-posterior as in the transverse direction. At the ends of the thoracic region they resemble respectively those of the cervical and lumbar vertebrae. They are slightly thicker behind than in front, flat above and below, convex from side to side in front, deeply concave behind, and slightly constricted laterally and in front. They present, on either side, two costal demi-facets, one above, near the root of the pedicle, the other below, in front of the inferior vertebral notch; these are covered with cartilage in the fresh state, and, when the vertebrae are articulated with one another, form, with the intervening intervertebral fibrocartilages, oval surfaces for the reception of the heads of the ribs.
The pedicles are directed backward and slightly upward, and the inferior vertebral notches are of large size, and deeper than in any other region of the vertebral column.
The laminae are broad, thick, and imbricated — that is to say, they overlap those of subjacent vertebrae like tiles on a roof.
The vertebral foramen is small, and of a circular form.
The spinous process is long, triangular on coronal section, directed obliquely downward, and ends in a tuberculated extremity. These processes overlap from the fifth to the eighth, but are less oblique in direction above and below.
The superior articular processes are thin plates of bone projecting upward from the junctions of the pedicles and laminae; their articular facets are practically flat, and are directed backward and a little lateralward and upward.
The inferior articular processes are fused to a considerable extent with the laminae, and project but slightly beyond their lower borders; their facets are directed forward and a little medialward and downward.
The transverse processes arise from the arch behind the superior articular processes and pedicles; they are thick, strong, and of considerable length, directed obliquely backward and lateralward, and each ends in a clubbed extremity, on the front of which is a small, concave surface, for articulation with the tubercle of a rib. *
The body is like that of a cervical vertebra, being broad transversely; its upper surface is concave, and lipped on either side.
The superior articular surfaces are directed upward and backward; the spinous process is thick, long, and almost horizontal.
The transverse processes are long, and the upper vertebral notches are deeper than those of the other thoracic vertebrae.
The thoracic spinal nerve 1 (T1) passes out underneath it.
The thoracic spinal nerve 4 (T4) passes out underneath it.
and at inferior angle of the scapula, respectively.]]
The thoracic spinal nerve 5 (T5) passes out underneath it.
The thoracic spinal nerve 8 (T8) passes out underneath it.
The thoracic spinal nerve 9 (T9) passes out underneath it.
The xiphisternum (or xyphoid process of the sternum) is at the same level in the axial plane.
The thoracic spinal nerve 10 (T10) passes out underneath it.
The articular facets for the heads of the ribs are of large size, and placed chiefly on the pedicles, which are thicker and stronger in this and the next vertebrae than in any other part of the thoracic region.
The spinous process is short, and nearly horizontal in direction.
The transverse processes are very short, tuberculated at their extremities, and have no articular facets.
The thoracic spinal nerve 11 (T11) passes out underneath it.
The thoracic spinal nerve 12 (T12) passes out underneath it.
Category:Bones of the torso Category:Vertebral column
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