(c) “Dr Slamovits immediately sent his patient to the Hackensack University Medical Center for a type of MRI [called MRA] that focuses on the blood vessels. It was a good call. The patient had a dissection.”
imaging
(i) magnetic resonance angiography
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_resonance_angiography
(MRA)
Vessels are white, because contrast agents, which is radio-opaque, is injected directly into the vessel at question.
(ii) computed tomography angiography
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computed_tomography_angiography
(CTA)
There is no need to read the text. Just view the photo, which demonstrates the descending portion of an aorta 主動脈, whose lower end is occluded somewhat, surrounded by a huge, round clot in the lumen of aneurysm. The aorta is opaque, due to contrast agent in it.
(d) common carotid artery
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_carotid_artery
(divide in the neck to form the external and internal carotid arteries [supplying blood to face and brain, respectively])
carotid artery 頸動脈
(e)
(i) Quotation 1 of (b)(i) above mentions “internal carotid artery plexus.” See the illustrations in
internal carotid plexus
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_carotid_plexus
, which depicts a plexus (Latin for ‘braid’) on the surface of internal carotid artery.
Take notice that in the top illustration, sympathetic system (red) is made up of three-neuron pathway --whereas parasympathetic system is blue. (In the dissection of internal carotid artery, the sympathetic plexus is stretched and partially loses function (to muscle “dilator pupillae”) therefore can not counter parasympathetic system which constrict the muscle called “sphincter pupillae” (Latin) to make the pupil smaller in diameter.
(ii) For three-neuron pathway, see
tcooper, Neuro-ophthalmology. Stanford University, Sept 24, 2013.
ophthalmology.stanford.edu/blog/archives/2013/09/neuro-ophthalmo-59.html
http://ophthalmology.stanford.ed ... o-ophthalmo-59.html
View Figure 2 only.
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