Applied Anatomy; the Construction of the Human Body Considered in Relation to Its Functions; Diseases And Injuries
The book Applied Anatomy; the Construction of the Human Body Considered in Relation to Its Functions; Diseases And Injuries was written by author Gwilym George Davis Here you can read free online of Applied Anatomy; the Construction of the Human Body Considered in Relation to Its Functions; Diseases And Injuries book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Applied Anatomy; the Construction of the Human Body Considered in Relation to Its Functions; Diseases And Injuries a good or bad book?
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195 The top of the pleura does not project into the neck in the form of a cone, but resembles a drum-head, being stretched in the form of a plane almost or quite level with the top of the first rib. Its upper surface is strengthened by fibres from the deep fascias of the neck and, according to Sibson, by some fibres from the scalene muscle. The pleura then slopes forward behind the sternoclavicular joint to meet the pleura of the opposite side at the level of the second costal cartilage, a litt...le to the left of the median line. They then descend until opposite or a little below the fourth costal cartilage, when they each diverge toward the side, reaching the upper border of the seventh costal cartilage near its sternal junction. They then slope down and out, reaching the lower border of the seventh rib in the mammary line, the ninth rib Fig. 214. — Anterior surface relations of the lungs and pleurse. in the axillary line, and the twelfth rib posteriorly (Joessel and Waldeyer, page 51).
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