Terminologia Anatomica
International standard on human anatomical terminology From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Terminologia Anatomica (commonly abbreviated TA) is the international standard for human anatomical terminology. It is developed by the Federative International Programme on Anatomical Terminology, a program of the International Federation of Associations of Anatomists (IFAA).
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History
The sixth edition of the previous standard, Nomina Anatomica, was released in 1989. The first edition of Terminologia Anatomica, superseding Nomina Anatomica, was developed by the Federative Committee on Anatomical Terminology (FCAT) and the International Federation of Associations of Anatomists (IFAA) and released in 1998.[1] In April 2011, this edition was published online by the Federative International Programme on Anatomical Terminologies (FIPAT), the successor of FCAT. The first edition contained 7635 Latin items.[2]
The second edition was released online by FIPAT in 2019 and approved and adopted by the IFAA General Assembly in 2020. The latest errata is dated August 2021.[3] It contains a total of 7112 numbered terms (1-7113 skipping 2590), with some terms repeated.[4]
Adoption and reception
A 2014 survey of the American Association of Clinical Anatomists found that the TA preferred term had the highest frequency of usage in only 53% of the 25 anatomical terms surveyed, and was highest or second-highest for 92% of terms. 75% of respondents were unfamiliar with FIPAT and TA.[5]
In a panel at the 2022 International Federation of Associations of Anatomists Congress, one author stated "the Terminologia Anatomica generally receives no attention in medical terminology courses", but stressed its importance.[6] The TA is not well established in other languages, such as French.[7] The English equivalent names are often inconsistent if viewed as translations of the accompanying Latin phrases.[8]
The Terminologia Anatomica specifically excludes eponyms, as they were determined to "give absolutely no anatomical information about the named structure, and vary considerably between countries and cultures".[9] In a 2023 study of eight gynecologic eponyms, the TA term was preferred in two cases, and showed a significant trend towards TA adoption in three others, leaving three non-TA terms likely to remain in common use.[10]
Categories of anatomical structures
Summarize
Perspective
Terminologia Anatomica is divided into 16 chapters grouped into five parts. The official terms are in Latin. Although equivalent English-language terms are provided, only the official Latin terms are used as the basis for creating lists of equivalent terms in other languages.
Part I
Chapter 1: General anatomy
Part II: Musculoskeletal systems
Chapter 2: Bones
Chapter 3: Joints
- Joints of skull
- Joints of auditory ossicles
- Laryngeal joints
- Joints of vertebral column
- Thoracic joints
- Joints of upper limb
- Joints of lower limb
Chapter 4: Muscular system
Part III: Visceral systems
Chapter 5: Digestive system
- Mouth
- Fauces
- Pharynx
- Digestive canal
- Liver
- Gallbladder
- Extrahepatic bile ducts
- Pancreas
Chapter 6: Respiratory system
Chapter 7: Thoracic cavity
Chapter 8: Urinary system
Chapter 9: Genital systems
Chapter 10: Abdominopelvic cavity
Part IV: Integrating systems I
Chapter 11: Endocrine glands
Chapter 12: Cardiovascular system
- Blood
- Lymph
- Vessels
- Vascular plexuses
- Heart
- Pulmonary vessels
- Cardiac vessels
- Systemic arteries
- Systemic veins
- Great lymphatic vessels
Chapter 13: Lymphoid organs
Part V: Integrating systems II
Chapter 14: Nervous system
Chapter 15: Sense organs
Chapter 16: The integument
See also
- Terminologia Embryologica
- Terminologia Histologica
- Foundational Model of Anatomy, an ontology using current naming conventions
- Anatomical terminology
References
External links
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