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Vitelline veins

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Vitelline veins
The liver and the veins in connection with it, of a human embryo, twenty-four or twenty-five days old, as seen from the ventral surface. (Vitelline veins visible at center bottom.)
Details
Carnegie stage9
Days28
Identifiers
LatinVena vitellina
FMA70305
Anatomical terminology

The vitelline veins are veins that drain blood from the yolk sac.

Path

They run upward at first in front, and subsequently on either side of the intestinal canal.

They unite on the ventral aspect of the canal, and beyond this are connected to one another by two anastomotic branches, one on the dorsal, and the other on the ventral aspect of the duodenal portion of the intestine, which is thus encircled by two venous rings; into the middle or dorsal anastomosis the superior mesenteric vein opens.

The portions of the veins above the upper ring become interrupted by the developing liver and broken up by it into a plexus of small capillary-like vessels termed sinusoids.

Derivatives

The vitelline veins give rise to

Inferior mesenteric vein, Ciliac trunk[1]

The branches conveying the blood to the plexus are named the venae advehentes, and become the branches of the portal vein. The vessels draining the plexus into the sinus venosus are termed the venae revehentes, and form the future hepatic veins. Ultimately the left vena revehens no longer communicates directly with the sinus venosus, but opens into the right vena revehens. The persistent part of the upper venous ring, above the opening of the superior mesenteric vein, forms the trunk of the portal vein.

Additional images

References

  1. ^ "Vitelline veins: Derivatives". LifeHugger. Retrieved 2009-12-11.