the diaphragm has three points of origin, creating a C shape that culminates in a stable, dense fibrous center tendon:
sternal group of muscle fibers is attached to the posterior aspect of the xiphoid process
costal group of muscle fibers originates from the inner surface of seven to twelfth ribs
lumbar group of muscular fibers arises from the medial and lateral arcuate ligaments and anterior longitudinal ligament, and lumbar vertebral bodies of L2-L3
there are three openings in the diaphragm, allowing structures to pass between the thoracic and abdominal cavity:
the oesophageal hiatus through which the esophagus and vagus nerve pass
the aortic hiatus through which the aorta, azygos vein and thoracic duct pass
the caval hiatus through which the inferior vena cava passes
each side has it's own blood supply from the inferior and superior phrenic arteries arising directly from the aorta, subcostal and intercostal arteries.
each hemidiaphragm is innervated by the ipsilateral phrenic nerve that arises from the cervical nerve roots of C3-C5
each phrenic nerve emerges through the anterior scalene muscle on either side of the neck and courses posteriorly to the subclavian vein
in the thoracic cavity, the right and left phrenic nerves follow different paths:
the right phrenic nerve descends anteriorly over the right atrium of the heart and exits through the inferior vena cava opening to innervate the inferior surface of the hemidiaphragm
the left phrenic nerve crosses the aortic arch and pericardium overlying the left ventricle until it pierces through the diaphragm to innervate the inferior surface of the left hemidiaphragm
sensory innervation of the diaphragm is from the intercostal nerves 6-11