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Anterior jugular vein

Blood vessel of the neck


Summary

Blood vessel of the neck

FieldValue
NameAnterior jugular vein
Latinvena jugularis anterior
ImageGray558.png
CaptionThe veins of the neck, viewed from in front
(anterior jugular visible at center)
Image2Gray557.png
Caption2Veins of the head and neck
(anterior jugular visible at bottom right)
DrainsToExternal jugular vein

(anterior jugular visible at center) (anterior jugular visible at bottom right) The anterior jugular vein is a vein in the neck.

Structure

The anterior jugular vein lies lateral to the cricothyroid membrane. It originates from near the hyoid bone by the confluence of several superficial veins in the submandibular region. Its tributaries are some laryngeal veins, and occasionally a small thyroid vein. It descends between the median line and the anterior border of the sternocleidomastoid muscle, and, at the lower part of the neck, passes beneath that muscle to open into the termination of the external jugular vein, or, in some instances, into the subclavian vein. Just above the sternum the two anterior jugular veins communicate by a transverse trunk, the venous jugular arch, which receive tributaries from the inferior thyroid veins; each also communicates with the internal jugular.

There are no valves in this vein.

The pretracheal lymph nodes follow the anterior jugular vein on each side of the midline.

Variation

The anterior jugular vein varies considerably in size, bearing usually an inverse proportion to the external jugular. Most frequently, there are two anterior jugulars, a right and left. However, there is sometimes only one.

A duplicate anterior jugular vein may be present on one side, which may cross over the midline.

Clinical significance

Ultrasound

The anterior jugular vein, if present, is easily identified using ultrasound of the neck.

Tracheotomy

The anterior jugular vein may be damaged during tracheotomy, causing significant bleeding. The significant variation in vein course, such as duplicate veins, creates this risk. Performing a midline incision helps to avoid the anterior jugular vein.

Additional images

Image:Gray384.png|Section of the neck at about the level of the sixth cervical vertebra. Image:Venenwinkel.png|Veins of the neck and chest

References

References

  1. Cattano, Davide. (2013-01-01). "Chapter 30 - Percutaneous Dilational Cricothyrotomy and Tracheostomy". W.B. Saunders.
  2. Rhys, Rhian. (2011-01-01). "CHAPTER 46 - Cervical lymph nodes". Churchill Livingstone.
  3. El-Sayed, Ivan H.. (2009-01-01). "CHAPTER 34 - Complications of Tracheostomy and Tracheal Surgery". Mosby.
  4. Rhys, Rhian. (2011-01-01). "CHAPTER 45 - Ultrasound of the neck". Churchill Livingstone.
  5. Osborn, Timothy Marx. (2012-01-01). "Chapter 34 - The Surgical Airway". W.B. Saunders.
  6. Gross, Ronald I.. (2008-01-01). "CHAPTER 17 - AIRWAY MANAGEMENT: WHAT EVERY TRAUMA SURGEON SHOULD KNOW, FROM INTUBATION TO CRICOTHYROIDOTOMY". Mosby.
  7. Minokadeh, Anushirvan. (2010-01-01). "CHAPTER 49 - Emergency Airway Management". W.B. Saunders.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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