Thoracic Inlet Anatomy

Introduction

The thoracic inlet (also called the superior thoracic aperture) is the opening at the top of the thoracic cavity, through which major vascular, respiratory, lymphatic, and neural structures pass between the neck and thorax.
In imaging, understanding the anatomy of the thoracic inlet is important for evaluating thoracic outlet syndrome, mediastinal masses, vascular compression, and trauma.
CT and MRI provide excellent delineation of its bony, vascular, and soft tissue components.


Boundaries

Bony Boundaries

  • Anterior: Superior border of manubrium sterni
  • Posterior: Body of T1 vertebra
  • Lateral: First pair of ribs and their costal cartilages

Planes and Dimensions

  • The thoracic inlet is kidney-shaped in cross-section.
  • Plane: Slants downwards anteroinferiorly from posterior to anterior.
  • Average diameter:
    • Transverse: ~10โ€“12 cm
    • AP: ~5โ€“6 cm

Contents

1. Vascular Structures

  • Arteries:
    • Right & left subclavian arteries
    • Right & left common carotid arteries (originates differently: brachiocephalic trunk on right, direct from aortic arch on left)
  • Veins:
    • Right & left brachiocephalic veins
    • Internal jugular veins joining with subclavian veins

2. Airway & Digestive

  • Trachea (central, slightly to right of midline)
  • Esophagus (posterior to trachea, slightly leftward)

3. Nerves

  • Vagus nerves (CN X) โ€“ anterior to subclavian arteries
  • Phrenic nerves โ€“ anterior to anterior scalene muscle, lateral to vagus
  • Sympathetic trunks โ€“ posterior, near vertebral bodies
  • Recurrent laryngeal nerves โ€“ branch from vagus (right loops around subclavian, left around aortic arch)

4. Lymphatics

  • Thoracic duct โ€“ ascends on left, posterior to esophagus
  • Right lymphatic duct โ€“ drains right upper quadrant of body

Radiological Appearance

On CT

  • Bony boundaries: Clearly seen on axial bone window (sternum anteriorly, ribs laterally, T1 posteriorly)
  • Vascular structures:
    • Arteries โ€“ opacify well with contrast; course in relation to scalene muscles
    • Veins โ€“ larger caliber, anterior to arteries
  • Airway: Trachea is low-attenuation air-filled structure; esophagus may be collapsed or contain air/fluid
  • Soft tissues: Fat planes help delineate fascial compartments

On MRI

  • Excellent for soft tissue contrast and neurovascular mapping
  • Vessels โ€“ bright on T2-weighted, flow void on spin-echo sequences
  • Nerves โ€“ intermediate signal intensity, better visualized with fat-suppressed sequences
  • Useful for brachial plexus imaging and evaluation of thoracic outlet compression

Applied Anatomy in Imaging

  • Thoracic Outlet Syndrome: Compression of brachial plexus or subclavian vessels โ€“ dynamic MRI or CT angiography used
  • Mass lesions: Thyroid goiter, lymphadenopathy, mediastinal tumors can extend through inlet
  • Trauma: Penetrating injuries may involve multiple vital structures
  • Infections: Spread from neck spaces into superior mediastinum through thoracic inlet

Summary Table โ€“ Key Structures at Thoracic Inlet

Structure TypeExamplesCT/MRI Landmark
BonesT1 vertebra, 1st ribs, manubriumHigh-attenuation cortical margins
ArteriesSubclavian, common carotidContrast-enhanced tubular structures
VeinsBrachiocephalic, internal jugularLarger caliber, anterior to arteries
AirwayTracheaCentral low attenuation on CT
DigestiveEsophagusPosterior to trachea, variable lumen
NervesVagus, phrenic, sympathetic trunkSeen as small linear structures in fat
LymphaticsThoracic duct, right lymphatic ductTiny tubular/serpiginous on MR

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