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Mnemonics: Respiratory System

Structures Passing Through the Diaphragm

What needs to be memorized: The structures that pass through the diaphragm at different vertebral levels - IVC at T8, Esophagus and Vagus nerve at T10, Aorta with Thoracic duct and Azygos vein at T12

Mnemonic: "I 8 (ate) 10 EGGS AT 12"

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • I → IVC (Inferior Vena Cava)
  • 8 → T8 vertebral level (sounds like "ate")
  • 10 → T10 vertebral level
  • EGGS → Esophagus + vaGus nerve (both at T10)
  • AT → Aorta + Thoracic duct (+ Azygos vein)
  • 12 → T12 vertebral level

Pro tip: Remember the numbers increase as you go down - 8, 10, 12. IVC is alone at T8, Esophagus brings Vagus as company at T10, and Aorta brings Thoracic duct and Azygos at T12!

Accessory Muscles of Inspiration

What needs to be memorized: Sternocleidomastoid, Scalenes, Pectoralis major, Pectoralis minor, Serratus anterior

Mnemonic: "Sachin's Super Power: Playing Shots"

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • Sachin's → Sternocleidomastoid
  • Super → Scalenes
  • Power: → Pectoralis major
  • Playing → Pectoralis minor
  • Shots → Serratus anterior

Bonus: The primary muscles (Diaphragm and External intercostals) do the regular breathing. These accessory muscles are like Sachin - called upon when extra effort is needed, like in respiratory distress!

Stages of Lung Development

What needs to be memorized: Embryonic period (0-5 weeks), Pseudoglandular period (5-17 weeks), Canalicular period (16-25 weeks), Saccular period (24-38 weeks), Alveolar period (36 weeks - 8 years)

Mnemonic: "Every Pediatric Child Should Breathe Alive"

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • Every → Embryonic period
  • Pediatric → Pseudoglandular period
  • Child → Canalicular period
  • Should → Saccular period
  • Breathe/be Alive → Alveolar period

Remember: The stages progress from simple to complex, just like the sentence flows naturally. By week 24-26 (Saccular stage), survival becomes possible!

Contents of Posterior Mediastinum

What needs to be memorized: Descending thoracic aorta, Azygos venous system, Thoracic duct, Esophagus, Vagus nerve, Sympathetic trunk

Mnemonic: "Dahi, Aloo-Tikki, Egg, Vada, Sabzi" (A typical Indian meal order!)

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • Dahi → Descending aorta
  • Aloo → Azygos venous system
  • Tikki → Thoracic duct
  • Egg → Esophagus
  • Vada → Vagus nerve
  • Sabzi → Sympathetic trunk

Think of it like ordering food at a dhaba - all these structures are found together in the posterior (back) mediastinum, just like all these items come together in your meal!

Respiratory Causes of Clubbing

What needs to be memorized: Bronchogenic carcinoma (Lung cancer), Tuberculosis, Bronchiectasis, Interstitial lung disease, Lung abscess, Empyema, Cystic fibrosis

Mnemonic: "Cricket Team Bats In League Every Championship"

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • Cricket → Cancer (Bronchogenic carcinoma)
  • Team → TB (Tuberculosis)
  • Bats → Bronchiectasis
  • In → Interstitial lung disease
  • League → Lung abscess
  • Every → Empyema
  • Championship → Cystic fibrosis

Clinical pearl: All these are chronic suppurative or chronic hypoxic conditions. Think of the cricket analogy - long-term commitment (chronic disease) leads to changes (clubbing)!

Right vs Left Main Bronchus Differences

What needs to be memorized: Right bronchus is Wider, Shorter, and More Vertical compared to the left bronchus

Mnemonic: "Right is WSV - Wide, Short, Vertical - Foreign body's favorite route!"

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • W → Wider
  • S → Shorter
  • V → More Vertical

Clinical significance: This is why foreign bodies and aspirated materials preferentially go to the RIGHT bronchus and right lower lobe. Think of it as the "express highway" - wide, short, and straight down! The left bronchus has to curve around the heart, so it's narrower, longer, and more horizontal.

Origin of Phrenic Nerve

What needs to be memorized: Phrenic nerve originates from C3, C4, and C5 cervical nerve roots

Mnemonic: "C 3, 4, 5 keeps the diaphragm alive!"

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • C3, C4, C5 → Cervical nerve roots (3rd, 4th, and 5th)
  • Alive → Essential for diaphragm function and breathing

Clinical importance: Injury above C3 means no phrenic nerve function → no diaphragm → can't breathe independently. Between C3-C5 injury may partially affect diaphragm. Below C5 - diaphragm is safe! This is crucial for spinal injury prognosis.

Types of Hypoxia

What needs to be memorized: Hypoxic hypoxia, Anemic hypoxia, Stagnant/Circulatory hypoxia, Histotoxic hypoxia

Mnemonic: "HASH"

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • H → Hypoxic hypoxia (low PaO₂ - altitude, lung disease)
  • A → Anemic hypoxia (low hemoglobin - can't carry oxygen)
  • S → Stagnant hypoxia (low blood flow - shock, heart failure)
  • H → Histotoxic hypoxia (tissues can't use O₂ - cyanide poisoning)

Memory trick: Think of the problem location - Lungs (Hypoxic), Blood content (Anemic), Blood flow (Stagnant), Tissue level (Histotoxic). HASH covers all four levels where oxygen delivery can fail!

Oxygen-Hemoglobin Dissociation Curve - Right Shift

What needs to be memorized: Factors causing right shift (decreased O₂ affinity, increased O₂ unloading to tissues): Increased CO₂, Acidosis, Increased 2,3-DPG, Exercise, Increased Temperature

Mnemonic: "CADET face RIGHT"

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • C → CO₂ increased (Bohr effect)
  • A → Acidosis (decreased pH)
  • D → 2,3-DPG increased
  • E → Exercise
  • T → Temperature increased
  • RIGHT → Right shift = oxygen Release to tissues

Clinical concept: Right shift is GOOD for tissues! All these conditions (exercise, fever, acidosis) mean tissues need MORE oxygen, so hemoglobin cooperatively releases oxygen more easily. Think "RIGHT = RELEASE"! Left shift is opposite - hemoglobin holds onto oxygen tighter.

Lung Lobes - Right vs Left

What needs to be memorized: Right lung has 3 lobes (Upper, Middle, Lower) with 10 bronchopulmonary segments. Left lung has 2 lobes (Upper, Lower) with 8-9 segments, and lingula instead of middle lobe

Mnemonic: "Right has 3 - Middle class family (Upper, Middle, Lower). Left has 2 - Couple only (Upper, Lower) because Heart occupies space!"

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • Right = 3 → Three lobes (Upper, Middle, Lower)
  • Right = 10 → Ten bronchopulmonary segments
  • Left = 2 → Two lobes (Upper with lingula, Lower)
  • Left = 8-9 → Eight to nine segments
  • Lingula → The "tongue-like" projection on left upper lobe (corresponds to right middle lobe)

Why the difference? The heart sits on the left side, taking up space, so the left lung has fewer lobes and segments. The lingula is a small projection that represents what would have been a separate middle lobe. Remember: Right = 3-10, Left = 2-Heart!

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