Hepatic portal vein
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Vein: Hepatic portal vein | ||
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The portal vein and its tributaries. It is formed by the superior mesenteric vein and splenic vein. Leinal vein is an old term for splenic vein. | ||
Longitudinal section of a small portal vein and canal. | ||
Latin | vena portæ | |
Gray's | subject #174 681 | |
Drains from | splenic vein, superior mesenteric vein | |
Drains to | liver | |
MeSH | A07.231.908.670.567 |
The hepatic portal vein (often portal vein for short) is a portal vein in the human body that drains blood from the digestive system and its associated glands. It is one of the main components of the portal venous system.
Contents |
[edit] Structure
It is formed by the union of the
and divides into a right and a left branch before entering the liver.
Note that the portal vein drains blood into the liver, not from the liver. The blood entering the liver from the portal vein, after being cleaned by the liver, flows into the inferior vena cava via the hepatic veins. The inferior mesenteric vein usually does not directly connect to the hepatic portal vein; it drains into the splenic vein.
Portal vein branches into many generation of vessels that open into hepatic sinusoids. Blood is recollected into the hepatic vein and enters the inferior vena cava.
[edit] Tributaries
The tributaries of the hepatic portal vein include:
[edit] Physiology
Almost all of the blood coming from the digestive system drains into a special venous circulation called the portal circulation. This is because it contains all the nutrients and toxins that have been absorbed along the digestive tract from ingested food. Before these absorbed substances can go into the systemic circulation (the main blood circulation in the body), it must be filtered first to remove or "detoxify" toxic substances first. This filtering and detoxification is one of the functions of the liver.
[edit] Role in disease
Increased blood pressure in the portal vein, portal hypertension, occurs in liver disease (mainly cirrhosis), and may lead to various complications (ascites, esophageal varices, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis). A disruption of the hypothalamo-pituitary portal veins is referred to as Pickardt syndrome (suprasellar failure).
[edit] See also
[edit] Additional images
[edit] External link
- SUNY Labs 38:12-0109 - "Stomach, Spleen and Liver: The Visceral Surface of the Liver"
- SUNY Anatomy Image 7959
- SUNY Anatomy Image 8565
- SUNY Anatomy Image 8697
- Cross section at UV pembody/body8a
- Human anatomy at Dartmouth figures/chapter_30/30-2.HTM
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Blood | Heart → Aorta → Arteries → Arterioles → Capillaries → Venules → Veins → Vena cava → Heart → Pulmonary arteries → Lungs → Pulmonary veins → Heart |
Categories: Abdomen | Veins | Hepatology