Common cardinal veins

During development of the veins, the first indication of a parietal system consists in the appearance of two short transverse veins, the ducts of Cuvier (or common cardinal veins[1]), which open, one on either side, into the sinus venosus. Each of these ducts receives an ascending and descending vein. The ascending veins return the blood from the parietes of the trunk and from the Wolffian bodies, and are called cardinal veins.

Common cardinal veins
Scheme of arrangement of parietal veins.
Human embryo with heart and anterior body-wall removed to show the sinus venosus and its tributaries.
Details
Identifiers
Latinvena cardinalis communis
Anatomical terminology

Additional images

See also

  • Georges Cuvier

References

This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 520 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

  • cardev-009—Embryo Images at University of North Carolina


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