Locations of the intestines in relation to the peritoneum

nid: 57070
Additional formats:
None available
Description:
This video explains the three locations of abdominal structures in relation to the peritoneum: intraperitoneal, secondary retroperitoneal, and retroperitoneal. Each of these three locations is first explained with a shematic graph and then shown in reality in a cadaver. This demonstrates that these three locations differ in accessibility and mobility. Also the locations 'subperitoneal' and 'preperitoneal' and the over-arching concept 'extraperitoneal' are discussed.
Also at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z6hOrjjwxt8 (YouTube sign in required)
 
Anatomical structures in item:
Peritoneum
Mesentery
Mesocolon
Uploaded by: opgobee Netherlands, Leiden – Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden University
Creator(s)/credit: O. Paul Gobée MD, anatomist, LUMC
Requirements for usage
You are free to use this item if you follow the requirements of the license: View license

If you use this item you should credit it as follows:

  • For usage in print - copy and paste the line below:
  • "Locations of the intestines in relation to the peritoneum" at AnatomyTOOL.org by O. Paul Gobée, LUMC, license: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike
  • For digital usage (e.g. in PowerPoint, Impress, Word, Writer) - copy and paste the line below (optionally add the license icon):
434 reads
Locations of the intestines in relation to the peritoneum
Uploaded by: opgobee
Institution: Netherlands, Leiden – Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden University
Creator(s)/credit: O. Paul Gobée MD, anatomist, LUMC
Review
  • Status: to be reviewed

https://video.leidenuniv.nl/media/t/1_q96g...

This video explains the three locations of abdominal structures in relation to the peritoneum: intraperitoneal, secondary retroperitoneal, and retroperitoneal. Each of these three locations is first explained with a shematic graph and then shown in reality in a cadaver. This demonstrates that these three locations differ in accessibility and mobility. Also the locations 'subperitoneal' and 'preperitoneal' and the over-arching concept 'extraperitoneal' are discussed.
Also at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z6hOrjjwxt8 (YouTube sign in required)
 
User comments
Language
EN
Educational level
+ + +
Technical info
Item id ('nid'): 57070
Online video
User comments

Comments

Anatomical structures in item
Peritoneum
Mesentery
Mesocolon
Topics
Gross
Dissection
Clinical discipline
Gastroenteric surgery