13 cards generated

Save your deck before it's gone

These flashcards aren't stored yet — they'll disappear when you leave. Create a free account to keep them, and unlock everything below.

Keep & study
  • Save this deck to your account
  • Study with spaced repetition
  • Export to Anki (.apkg) or PDF
Bigger & better generations
  • Process documents up to 100 pages
  • Images extracted from your PDFs
  • Sharper text extraction & a more advanced AI model
Sign up free → Free forever · No credit card

Flashcards in this deck (13)

Searching...
  • What are the main layers of the anterior abdominal wall from superficial to deep?


    • Skin
    • Superficial fascia
    • Deep fascia
    • Muscles
    • Extraperitoneal fascia
    • Parietal peritoneum
    anatomy abdomen layers
  • Which nerves supply cutaneous innervation to the anterior abdominal wall?


    • Anterior rami of lower 6 thoracic nerves (lower 5 intercostal and subcostal nerves)
    innervation nerves abdomen
  • Which abdominal muscles are supplied by the anterior rami of the lower 6 thoracic nerves?


    • External oblique
    • Internal oblique
    • Transversus abdominis
    • Rectus abdominis
    • Pyramidalis (T12 only)
    muscles innervation abdomen
  • What dermatome corresponds to the epigastrium over the xiphoid process?


    • T7
    dermatome abdomen
  • Which dermatome includes the umbilicus?


    • T10
    dermatome abdomen
  • Which dermatome supplies the area just above the inguinal ligament and symphysis pubis?


    • L1
    dermatome abdomen
  • Name the arterial vessels supplying skin near the midline of the anterior abdominal wall.


    • Superior epigastric (internal thoracic)
    • Inferior epigastric (external iliac)
    • Superficial epigastric (femoral)
    • Lateral thoracic (axillary)
    arterial abdomen midline
  • Name the arterial vessels supplying the skin of the flanks.


    • Posterior intercostal (descending thoracic aorta)
    • Lumbar (abdominal aorta)
    • Deep circumflex iliac (external iliac)
    • Superficial circumflex iliac (femoral)
    arterial abdomen flank
  • Describe the venous network arrangement of the anterior abdominal wall around the umbilicus.


    • Veins radiate out from the umbilicus
    • Drained above into axillary/thoracic veins
    • Drained below into femoral via superficial epigastric and great saphenous veins
    venous abdomen umbilicus
  • What is the significance of the paraumbilical veins in the anterior abdominal wall venous drainage?


    • Connect the superficial network through the umbilicus and ligamentum teres to the portal vein, forming portal-systemic anastomoses
    venous portal anastomosis
  • Where do cutaneous lymph vessels above the level of the umbilicus drain?


    • Anterior axillary lymph nodes
    lymph abdomen
  • Where do cutaneous lymph vessels below the level of the umbilicus drain?


    • Superficial inguinal lymph nodes
    lymph abdomen
  • Which deep lymph nodes receive drainage following the arteries of the anterior abdominal wall?


    • Internal thoracic
    • External iliac
    • Para-aortic (lumbar)
    • Posterior mediastinal
    lymph deep abdomen
Study Notes

Anterior abdominal wall — concise study notes

Layers (superficial → deep)

  1. Skin
  2. Superficial fascia (fatty and membranous layers)
  3. Deep (investing) fascia over muscles
  4. Muscles and their aponeuroses
  5. Extraperitoneal (subserous) fascia
  6. Parietal peritoneum

Muscles (anterior/lateral)

  • External oblique, internal oblique, transversus abdominis, rectus abdominis, pyramidalis (small; T12).
  • Muscles provide wall strength, form rectus sheath and inguinal region structures.

Nerve supply

  • Cutaneous motor and sensory supply from the anterior rami of lower 6 thoracic nerves: lower 5 intercostals (T7–T11) and subcostal (T12).
  • These nerves innervate skin, parietal peritoneum, and the anterior abdominal muscles.

Key dermatomes

  • T7: epigastrium, over xiphoid process.
  • T10: umbilicus (useful clinical landmark).
  • L1: skin just above the inguinal ligament and over the pubic symphysis.

Arterial supply

  • Midline/central supply:
  • Superior epigastric artery (branch of internal thoracic)
  • Inferior epigastric artery (branch of external iliac)
  • Superficial epigastric artery (from femoral)
  • Lateral thoracic artery (from axillary) supplies upper anterior skin laterally
  • Flank/lateral supply:
  • Posterior intercostal arteries (from thoracic aorta)
  • Lumbar arteries (from abdominal aorta)
  • Deep circumflex iliac artery (from external iliac)
  • Superficial circumflex iliac artery (from femoral)

Venous drainage

  • Superficial veins form a network radiating from the umbilicus.
  • Drain superiorly toward the thoracic/axillary veins.
  • Drain inferiorly toward the femoral vein via the superficial epigastric and great saphenous veins.
  • Paraumbilical veins connect the superficial network and ligamentum teres to the portal vein, creating important portal–systemic anastomoses (clinical: caput medusae in portal hypertension).

Lymphatic drainage

  • Superficial (cutaneous)
  • Above the umbilicus → anterior axillary (pectoral) lymph nodes.
  • Below the umbilicus → superficial inguinal lymph nodes.
  • Deep lymphatics follow arteries and drain to:
  • Internal thoracic nodes
  • External iliac nodes
  • Para-aortic (lumbar) nodes
  • Posterior mediastinal nodes

Clinical correlations (brief)

  • Dermatomes help localize visceral pain and incision placement (e.g., T10 for umbilicus).
  • Portal–systemic anastomoses at the umbilicus cause visible abdominal wall veins in portal hypertension (caput medusae).
  • Knowledge of epigastric vessels is essential to avoid bleeding in midline and lower abdominal incisions and hernia repairs.

High-yield summary

  • The anterior abdominal wall consists of six layers from skin to parietal peritoneum; motor/sensory supply is from T7–T12 (and L1 sensory contribution), arterial supply is segmental with midline and lateral sources, venous drainage includes superficial networks connected to the portal system, and lymph drains differently above vs below the umbilicus.