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The parietal peritoneum is attached here and to the abdominal wall.
The inside wall is covered by the parietal peritoneum.
The parietal peritoneum is the lining on the inside of the abdominal cavity.
The peritoneum is made of two parts, the visceral and parietal peritoneum.
Typically, point (skin) pain is not present until the parietal peritoneum is inflamed, as well.
It is thinner than the parietal peritoneum.
Laparoscopy may reveal "violin string" adhesions of parietal peritoneum to liver.
Between the visceral and parietal peritoneum is the peritoneal cavity, which is a potential space.
Both the abdominal and pelvic cavities are lined by a serous membrane known as the parietal peritoneum.
It is a visceromotor reflex, since the parietal peritoneum and viscera are involved in generating the reflex.
In some postures the liver may pinch the parietal peritoneum against the lower rib cage, producing sharp, transitory pain, relieved by changing position.
His name is also associated with "Claudius' fossa", now referred to as the ovarian fossa, a depression in the parietal peritoneum of the pelvis.
The peritoneum that lies on the walls of the abdominopelvic cavity (parietal peritoneum) invaginates at certain parts, with an organ inside this invagination.
"White line of Toldt": Lateral reflection of posterior parietal peritoneum of abdomen over the mesentery of the ascending and descending colon.
Structures that are not suspended by mesentery in the abdominal cavity and that lie between the parietal peritoneum and abdominal wall are classified as retroperitoneal.
The viscera accounts for roughly four-fifths of the total surface area of the membrane, but the parietal peritoneum is the more important of the two portions for PD.
The peritoneal cavity is a potential space between the parietal peritoneum and visceral peritoneum, that is, the two membranes that separate the organs in the abdominal cavity from the abdominal wall.
Hyalinobatrachium is a genus of glassfrogs characterized by having a bulbous liver covered by white pigment, a transparent parietal peritoneum, extensive membrane between the outer fingers, and lacking a humeral spine in adult males.
The septum femorale is pierced by numerous lymphatic vessels passing from the deep inguinal to the external iliac lymph glands, and the parietal peritoneum immediately above it presents a slight depression named the femoral fossa.
There is a common set of layers covering and forming all the walls: the deepest being the extraperitoneal fat, the parietal peritoneum, and a layer of fascia, which has different names according to what it covers (e.g., transversalis, psoas fascia).