Bronchopulmonary segment

Bronchopulmonary segment
Bronchopulmonary segments visible but not labeled.

Each of the tertiary bronchi serves a specific bronchopulmonary segment. These segments each have their own artery. Thus, each bronchopulmonary segment is supplied by a bronchus, and two arteries, a pulmonary artery and a bronchial artery which run together through the center of the segment. Veins and lymphatics drain along the edges.

There are 10 bronchopulmonary segments in the right lung (3 in superior lobe, 2 in middle lobe, 5 in inferior lobe) and 8-10 segments on the left (4-5 in upper lobe, 4-5 in lower lobe). Each segment is separated from the others by a layer of connective tissue.

This means that each bronchopulmonary segment is a discrete anatomical and functional unit, and this separation means that a bronchopulmonary segment can be surgically removed without affecting the function of the other segments.

Delineation of the bronchopulmonary segments was made by Dr. John Franklin Huber at Temple University Hospital. [1]

Contents

Right lung

A PALM Seed Makes Another Little Palm

Left lung

ASIA ALPS

Apoptotic Antlions Stop In, Suddenly Amalgamating Laboratory Posts

AP And Supine alignment Increases Limited Studies And Makes Baseline Pulmonary Bases Look Bad (a radiology mnemonic)

References

  1. ^ http://www.temple.edu/medicine/about/history.htm Temple University School of Medicine - History

A P'a'ss In Anatomy Makes Linda Proud

External links