How To Use Manubrium In A Sentence
-
The lenticular process is substantially longer than the arm of the manubrium which connects the tympanum to the articular facet.
-
The manubrium sometimes extends to the insertion of the third costal cartilages.
-
Legends: bm: bell margin; cc: cilia of the circular canal digestive cells; csc: cilia of the statocyst sensory cells; er: external nerve ring; g: gonad; ir: internal nerve ring; m: manubrium; s: statocyst; t: tentacle; tb: tentacle bulb. figure 2A-E).
PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
-
The medial-caudal migration pathway forms the thymopharyngeal tract, which runs from the angle of the mandible to the manubrium of the sternum bilaterally.
-
This approach involves incising the skin and subcutaneous tissue overlying the sternum, sawing longitudinally through the manubrium, body, and xiphoid process of the sternum, and cutting into the pericardial sacs.
-
The right and left parts of the muscle are joined by a tendon that arises from the manubrium of the sternum.
-
It's just possible to make out the Angle of Louis, the ridge in the middle of the sword-shaped breastbone where its immature plates, the manubrium and sternal body fused.
-
The manubrium, which is the upper part, the body, which is the main part, then the xiphoid process.
BLINDSIGHTED
-
From the center of the subumbrella hangs the manubrium, which terminates with a mouth opening.
-
The manubrium, which is the upper part, the body, which is the main part, then the xiphoid process.
BLINDSIGHTED
-
This approach involves incising the skin and subcutaneous tissue overlying the sternum, sawing longitudinally through the manubrium, body, and xiphoid process of the sternum, and cutting into the pericardial sacs.
-
The manubrium mallei (handle) is connected by its lateral margin with the tympanic membrane.
X. The Organs of the Senses and the Common Integument. 1d. 3. The Auditory Ossicles
-
The ossific centers appear in the intervals between the articular depressions for the costal cartilages, in the following order: in the manubrium and first piece of the body, during the sixth month; in the second and third pieces of the body, during the seventh month of fetal life; in its fourth piece, during the first year after birth; and in the xiphoid process, between the fifth and eighteenth years.
II. Osteology. 4a. The Sternum
-
Running upward and slightly forward from the umbo is a reddish-yellow streak produced by the manubrium of the malleus.
XII. Surface Anatomy and Surface Markings. 2. Surface Markings of Special Regions of the Head and Neck
-
The retroarticular process of the articular persists only as the tiny manubrium which remains in contact with the tympanic membrane as it presumably did in Probainognathus.
-
The Superior Mediastinum (Fig. 967) is that portion of the interpleural space which lies between the manubrium sterni in front, and the upper thoracic vertebræ behind.
XI. Splanchnology. 1d. The Mediastinum
-
The Left Innominate Vein (v. anonyma sinistra), about 6 cm. in length, begins behind the sternal end of the clavicle and runs obliquely downward and to the right behind the upper half of the manubrium sterni to the sternal end of the first right costal cartilage, where it unites with the right innominate vein to form the superior vena cava.
VII. The Veins. 3c. The Veins of the Upper Extremity and Thorax
-
The base of the manubrium appears as a dark square in the center of the subumbrella.
-
All rhinolophoids have an ossified first costal cartilage fused to the manubrium and first rib.
-
The lenticular process is substantially longer than the arm of the manubrium which connects the tympanum to the articular facet.
-
The sternum consists of segments, the sternebrae (st.); anteriorly there is a bony manubrium (mb.), posteriorly a thin cartilaginous plate, the xiphisternum (xi.).
Text Book of Biology, Part 1: Vertebrata
-
Some twenty minutes after the accident the patient used a spoonlike earpick to remove a bony fragment from deep in his ear canal and we identified this as the malleus that had been fractured at its manubrium.