Mediastinal pleura
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Mediastinal pleura | |
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A transverse section of the thorax, showing the contents of the middle and the posterior mediastinum. The pleural and pericardial cavities are exaggerated since normally there is no space between parietal and visceral pleura and between pericardium and heart. | |
Latin | Pleura mediastinalis |
Gray's | subject #238 1088 |
Different portions of the parietal pleura have received special names which indicate their position: thus, that portion which lines the inner surfaces of the ribs and intercostals is the costal pleura; the pleura lining the convex surface of the diaphragm is the diaphragmatic pleura; that which rises into the neck, over the apex of the lung, is the cupula of the pleura (cervical pleura); and that which is applied to the other thoracic viscera is the mediastinal pleura.
External links
- SUNY Figs 19:02-03
- 1657798715 at GPnotebook
- thoraxlesson2 at The Anatomy Lesson by Wesley Norman (Georgetown University)
- lung_pleura at the University of Michigan Health System
- MedEd at Loyola Grossanatomy/thorax0/thor_lec/thor6.html
This article incorporates text from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy.
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