Great saphenous vein

Vein: Great saphenous vein
The great saphenous vein and landmarks along its course
The great saphenous vein and its tributaries at the fossa ovalis in the groin.
Latin vena saphena magna
Gray's subject #173 669
Source dorsal venous arch of the foot, and others
Drains to femoral vein
MeSH Saphenous+Vein

The great saphenous vein (GSV), also long saphenous vein, is the large (subcutaneous) superficial vein of the leg and thigh.

The terms "safaina" (Greek, meaning "manifest," "to be clearly seen") and "el safin" (Arabic, meaning "hidden/concealed") have both been claimed as the origin for the word "saphenous."[1]

Contents

Path

The GSV originates from where the dorsal vein of the first digit (the large toe) merges with the dorsal venous arch of the foot.

After passing anterior to the medial malleolus (where it often can be visualized and palpated), it runs up the medial side of the leg.

At the knee, it runs over the posterior border of the medial epicondyle of the femur bone.

The great saphenous vein then courses medially to lie on the anterior surface of the thigh before entering an opening in the fascia lata called the saphenous opening.

It joins with the femoral vein in the region of the femoral triangle at the saphenofemoral junction.

Tributaries

At the ankle it receives branches from the sole of the foot through the medial marginal vein; in the lower leg it anastomoses freely with the small saphenous vein, communicates with the anterior and posterior tibial veins and receives many cutaneous veins; in the thigh it communicates with the femoral vein and receives numerous tributaries; those from the medial and posterior parts of the thigh frequently unite to form a large accessory saphenous vein which joins the main vein at a variable level.

Near the fossa ovalis it is joined by the superficial epigastric, superficial iliac circumflex, and superficial external pudendal veins.

The thoracoepigastric vein runs along the lateral aspect of the trunk between the superficial epigastric vein below and the lateral thoracic vein above and establishes an important communication between the femoral vein and the axillary vein .

Use in cardiovascular procedures

The vein is often removed by vascular surgeons and used for autotransplantation in coronary artery bypass operations, when arterial grafts are not available or many grafts are required, such as in a triple bypass or quadruple bypass.

The great saphenous vein is the conduit of choice for vascular surgeons,[2][3] when available, for doing peripheral arterial bypass operations [ see vascular bypass ] because it has superior long-term patency compared to synthetic grafts (PTFE, PETE (Dacron)), human umbilical vein grafts or biosynthetic grafts [Omniflow]. Often, it is used in situ (in place), after tying off smaller tributaries and stripping the valves with a device called LeMaitre's valvulotome.

The saphenous nerve is a branch of the femoral nerve that runs with the great saphenous vein and is often damaged in surgeries that make use of the similarly named vein.

Use in emergency medicine

When emergency resuscitation with fluids is necessary, and standard intravenous access can not achieved due to venous collapse, saphenous vein cutdown may be necessary.

Pathology of the saphenous vein

Pathology of the great saphenous vein is relatively common, but in isolation typically not life threatening.[4]

See also

Additional images

References

  1. ^ Caggiati A, Bergan JJ (January 2002). "The saphenous vein: derivation of its name and its relevant anatomy". J. Vasc. Surg. 35 (1): 172–5. PMID 11802151. http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0741521402524800. 
  2. ^ Muhs BE, Gagne P, Sheehan P (February 2005). "Peripheral arterial disease: clinical assessment and indications for revascularization in the patient with diabetes". Curr. Diab. Rep. 5 (1): 24–9. PMID 15663913. 
  3. ^ Mamode N, Scott RN (2000). "Graft type for femoro-popliteal bypass surgery". Cochrane Database Syst Rev (2): CD001487. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD001487. PMID 10796649. 
  4. ^ a b Feied C, Handler JA. Thrombophlebitis, Superficial. eMedicine.com. Available at: http://www.emedicine.com/emerg/topic582.htm. Accessed on: December 18, 2006.

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