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Splenic vein

Vein that drains blood from the spleen, stomach and pancreas


Summary

Vein that drains blood from the spleen, stomach and pancreas

FieldValue
NameSplenic vein
Latinvena lienalis
ImageBilebladder.png
CaptionThe splenic vein, here called the "lienal vein", travels from the spleen, above the pancreas, and ends in the portal vein.
DrainsFromTrabecular vein of spleen
SourceShort gastric veins, left gastroepiploic vein, pancreatic veins, inferior mesenteric vein
DrainsToHepatic portal vein
ArterySplenic artery
SystemHepatic portal system

In human anatomy, the splenic vein (formerly the lienal vein) is a blood vessel that drains blood from the spleen, the stomach fundus and part of the pancreas. It is part of the hepatic portal system.

Structure

The splenic vein is formed from small venules that leave the spleen. It travels above the pancreas, alongside the splenic artery. It collects branches from the stomach and pancreas, and most notably from the large intestine (also drained by the superior mesenteric vein) via the inferior mesenteric vein, which drains in the splenic vein shortly before the origin of the hepatic portal vein. The splenic vein ends in the portal vein, formed when the splenic vein joins the superior mesenteric vein.

Clinical significance

The splenic vein can be affected by thrombosis, presenting some of the characteristics of portal vein thrombosis and portal hypertension but localized to part of the territory drained by the splenic vein. These include varices in the stomach wall due to hypertension in the short gastric veins and abdominal pain. This results in gastric varices, in which the treatment of choice would be splenectomy. The most common cause for splenic vein thrombosis is both chronic and acute pancreatitis.

Additional images

File:Gray1189.png|Cross-section of the spleen, showing the splenic vein and its tributaries.

References

References

  1. (1990). "Splenic vein thrombosis". Southern Medical Journal.
  2. (2011). "Natural history of pancreatitis-induced splenic vein thrombosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis of its incidence and rate of gastrointestinal bleeding". HPB.
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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