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CT of the paraumbilical and ensiform veins in patients with superior vena cava or left brachiocephalic vein obstruction

The purpose of this study was to elaborate on the anastomoses between the paraumbilical and systemic veins, particularly the ensiform veins. The connections with the ensiform veins have received little attention in the anatomical and radiological literature, and remain incompletely described. Too sm...

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Autores principales: Casullo, Joseph, Zeng, Han, Belley, Geneviève, Artho, Giovanni
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5919579/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29698414
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196093
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author Casullo, Joseph
Zeng, Han
Belley, Geneviève
Artho, Giovanni
author_facet Casullo, Joseph
Zeng, Han
Belley, Geneviève
Artho, Giovanni
author_sort Casullo, Joseph
collection PubMed
description The purpose of this study was to elaborate on the anastomoses between the paraumbilical and systemic veins, particularly the ensiform veins. The connections with the ensiform veins have received little attention in the anatomical and radiological literature, and remain incompletely described. Too small to be reliably traced in normal CT scans, the paraumbilical veins can dilate in response to increased blood flow from systemic veins in superior vena cava obstruction (SVCO), allowing a study of their arrangement and connections. Collateral paraumbilical veins were therefore analyzed retrospectively in 28 patients with SVCO using CT. We observed inferior and superior groups of collateral vessels in 23/28 (82%) and 17/28 (61%) patients, respectively. Inferior veins ascended towards the liver and drained into portal veins (19/28, 68%) or the umbilical vein (8/28, 29%); superior veins descended and drained into portal veins. The inferior veins (N = 27) could be traced to ensiform veins in almost all of the cases (26/27, 96%), and a little over half (14/27, 52%) were also traceable to subcutaneous and deep epigastric veins. They were opacified by ensiform (25/27, 93%), deep epigastric (4/27, 15%) and subcutaneous (4/27, 15%) veins. The superior veins (N = 17) were supplied by diaphragmatic (13/17, 76%) and ensiform veins (4/17, 24%); the diaphragmatic veins were branches of collateral internal thoracic, left pericardiacophrenic and anterior mediastinal veins. Collateral ensiform veins were observed in 22 patients and anastomosed with internal thoracic (19/22, 86%), superior epigastric (9/22, 41%), diaphragmatic (4/22, 18%), subcutaneous (3/22, 14%) and anterior mediastinal veins (1/22, 5%). These observations show that the paraumbilical veins communicate with ensiform, deep epigastric, subcutaneous and diaphragmatic veins, joining the liver to the properitoneal fat pad, anterior trunk, diaphragm and mediastinum. In SVCO, the most common sources of collateral flow to the paraumbilical veins are the ensiform and diaphragmatic branches of the internal thoracic veins.
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spelling pubmed-59195792018-05-11 CT of the paraumbilical and ensiform veins in patients with superior vena cava or left brachiocephalic vein obstruction Casullo, Joseph Zeng, Han Belley, Geneviève Artho, Giovanni PLoS One Research Article The purpose of this study was to elaborate on the anastomoses between the paraumbilical and systemic veins, particularly the ensiform veins. The connections with the ensiform veins have received little attention in the anatomical and radiological literature, and remain incompletely described. Too small to be reliably traced in normal CT scans, the paraumbilical veins can dilate in response to increased blood flow from systemic veins in superior vena cava obstruction (SVCO), allowing a study of their arrangement and connections. Collateral paraumbilical veins were therefore analyzed retrospectively in 28 patients with SVCO using CT. We observed inferior and superior groups of collateral vessels in 23/28 (82%) and 17/28 (61%) patients, respectively. Inferior veins ascended towards the liver and drained into portal veins (19/28, 68%) or the umbilical vein (8/28, 29%); superior veins descended and drained into portal veins. The inferior veins (N = 27) could be traced to ensiform veins in almost all of the cases (26/27, 96%), and a little over half (14/27, 52%) were also traceable to subcutaneous and deep epigastric veins. They were opacified by ensiform (25/27, 93%), deep epigastric (4/27, 15%) and subcutaneous (4/27, 15%) veins. The superior veins (N = 17) were supplied by diaphragmatic (13/17, 76%) and ensiform veins (4/17, 24%); the diaphragmatic veins were branches of collateral internal thoracic, left pericardiacophrenic and anterior mediastinal veins. Collateral ensiform veins were observed in 22 patients and anastomosed with internal thoracic (19/22, 86%), superior epigastric (9/22, 41%), diaphragmatic (4/22, 18%), subcutaneous (3/22, 14%) and anterior mediastinal veins (1/22, 5%). These observations show that the paraumbilical veins communicate with ensiform, deep epigastric, subcutaneous and diaphragmatic veins, joining the liver to the properitoneal fat pad, anterior trunk, diaphragm and mediastinum. In SVCO, the most common sources of collateral flow to the paraumbilical veins are the ensiform and diaphragmatic branches of the internal thoracic veins. Public Library of Science 2018-04-26 /pmc/articles/PMC5919579/ /pubmed/29698414 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196093 Text en © 2018 Casullo et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Casullo, Joseph
Zeng, Han
Belley, Geneviève
Artho, Giovanni
CT of the paraumbilical and ensiform veins in patients with superior vena cava or left brachiocephalic vein obstruction
title CT of the paraumbilical and ensiform veins in patients with superior vena cava or left brachiocephalic vein obstruction
title_full CT of the paraumbilical and ensiform veins in patients with superior vena cava or left brachiocephalic vein obstruction
title_fullStr CT of the paraumbilical and ensiform veins in patients with superior vena cava or left brachiocephalic vein obstruction
title_full_unstemmed CT of the paraumbilical and ensiform veins in patients with superior vena cava or left brachiocephalic vein obstruction
title_short CT of the paraumbilical and ensiform veins in patients with superior vena cava or left brachiocephalic vein obstruction
title_sort ct of the paraumbilical and ensiform veins in patients with superior vena cava or left brachiocephalic vein obstruction
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5919579/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29698414
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196093
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