Trachea
The trachea, known colloquially as the windpipe, connects the upper respiratory tract to the lungs via the tracheobronchial tree, enabling gas exchange.
Gross anatomy
The trachea is a tube-shaped structure consisting of 15-to-20 D-shaped cartilage rings anterolaterally bridged by annular ligaments. The trachealis muscle encircles the trachea completely but is most prominent posteriorly due to the lack of cartilage .
The trachea extends from the inferior margin of the cricoid cartilage (C6) and branches into the right and left main bronchi at the carina, located at the T4 vertebral body level, in the plane of Ludwig. It is usually situated in a midline position and can be displaced slightly to the right at the arch of the aorta . In the lateral view, the trachea slants from an anterior position beneath the larynx to a posterior position at the carina . The tracheal length is usually between 10-13 cm with a width of 1.5-2 cm and is wider in men than in women .
Relations
- anteriorly: sternum, strap muscles, thyroid isthmus, ascending aorta, brachiocephalic artery, right common carotid artery, superior vena cava, inferior thyroid veins, left brachiocephalic vein
- posteriorly: esophagus
- laterally: lateral walls of the thyroid gland, left common carotid artery, arch of azygous vein, right and left recurrent laryngeal nerves, right and left vagus nerves
Arterial supply
- proximal half: tracheo-esophageal branches of the inferior thyroid artery
- distal half and carina: superior and middle bronchial arteries
Venous drainage
- to inferior thyroid venous plexus
Lymphatic drainage
- to pretracheal and paratracheal lymph nodes
Histology
The trachea has three layers :
- external: loose connective tissue/adventitia: note there is no capsule
- middle: fibromusculocartilaginous membrane: tracheal cartilage, annular ligaments, connective tissue and trachealis muscle
- internal: respiratory mucous membrane: tracheal glands with a pseudostratified columnar epithelium
Variant anatomy
- tracheal bronchus or "pig bronchus"
- development of an extra bronchus that usually develops superior to the carina from the trachea, above the right main bronchus and connecting to the right upper lobe
- common and can be found in 2% of people
- may not present with any symptoms and can be an incidental finding usually via bronchoscopy, however, it may cause problems during intubation
- may be associated with chronic atelectasis, bronchiectasis and recurrent pneumonia
- lunate trachea
- coronal-to-sagittal ratio of the trachea is >1 giving rise to a lunate-shaped cross section rather than round or oval
- may be associated with COPD and tracheomalacia
- tracheal diverticulum
- outpouching of the posterolateral tracheal wall, usually on the right side
- majority of patients are asymptomatic although may present with a recurrent respiratory tract infection
- esophageal bronchus
- tracheal buckling in young infants
Related pathology
- tracheomalacia
- tracheal masses
- acute laryngotracheobronchitis
- juvenile laryngotracheal papillomatosis
- tracheal papillomatosis
- saber sheath trachea
- tracheal stenosis
- tracheal web