Abdominal Vasculature

Abdominal Vasculature

Abdominal Vasculature

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Abdominal Aorta - Main Highway

  • Origin: Aortic hiatus (diaphragm), T12.
  • Termination: Bifurcates to common iliacs, L4.
  • Relations: Posterior to pancreas & L renal vein; Anterior to vertebral bodies; IVC on right.
  • Branches:
    • Unpaired Visceral (Anterior): 📌 Celiac (T12), SMA (L1), IMA (L3).
    • Paired Visceral (Lateral): Middle Suprarenal, Renal (L1-L2), Gonadal (L2).
    • Paired Parietal (Posterolateral): Inferior Phrenic, Lumbar (4 pairs, L1-L4).
    • Terminal: Bifurcates to Common Iliacs (L4); Median Sacral (posterior).

⭐ Origin: Aortic hiatus (diaphragm, T12). Termination: Bifurcates to common iliacs (L4).

Abdominal Aorta and Major Branches Diagram

Celiac Trunk - Upper Gut Supply

  • Origin: Anterior aorta, T12/L1. Supplies foregut.
  • Branches (📌 Mnemonic: "Left Hand Side" - LHS):
    • Left Gastric Artery: Stomach (lesser curve), lower esophagus.
    • Splenic Artery: Spleen, pancreas, stomach (fundus, greater curve).
      • Sub-branches: Short gastric, left gastro-omental arteries.
    • Common Hepatic Artery:
      • Proper Hepatic Artery: Liver, gallbladder (cystic a.), stomach (right gastric a.).
      • Gastroduodenal Artery (GDA): Duodenum, pancreas head, stomach (right gastro-omental a.).

Celiac Trunk and Branches with Organs

⭐ The gastroduodenal artery (from common hepatic) erosion by posterior duodenal ulcer causes severe hemorrhage.

Mesenteric Arteries - Gut's Long Haul

  • Superior Mesenteric Artery (SMA): Origin L1, supplies midgut.
  • Inferior Mesenteric Artery (IMA): Origin L3, supplies hindgut.
ArteryBranchesSupplies
SMAJejunal, ileal, ileocolic, right colic, middle colicDistal duodenum to proximal 2/3 transverse colon
IMALeft colic, sigmoid, superior rectalDistal 1/3 transverse colon to upper anal canal

SMA and IMA distributions and anastomoses

⭐ Griffith's point (splenic flexure) is a watershed area between SMA & IMA supply, vulnerable to ischemia.

Venous Drainage - Rivers Returning

  • Inferior Vena Cava (IVC):
    • Forms at L5 (common iliac veins); ends in right atrium.
    • Tributaries: Lumbar, R. Gonadal, R. Suprarenal, Renal, Hepatic.
  • Portal Vein:
    • Forms: SMV + Splenic Vein (post. to pancreas neck).
    • Drains: GIT, spleen, pancreas, gallbladder.
    • Tributaries: SMV, Splenic, Gastric (L&R), Cystic, Paraumbilical.
  • Portocaval Anastomoses: Portal-systemic links; key in portal hypertension (→ varices).
    • 📌 GURES Sites: Gut (esophageal), Umbilicus, Rectal, Retroperitoneal, Spleen/Suprarenal & intrahepatic.

Non-variceal Extrahepatic Portosystemic Shunts Diagram

⭐ L. gonadal & L. suprarenal veins → L. renal vein; R. counterparts → IVC directly.

Clinical Correlations - Vascular Hotspots

  • Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA)
    • Def: Aortic dilation >3 cm.
    • Risks: Atherosclerosis, smoking, HTN, male >65y, family Hx.
    • Location: Infrarenal (surgery >5.5 cm).
  • Mesenteric Ischemia
    • Acute (embolus), Chronic (atherosclerosis).
    • Vulnerable: Watershed zones (Griffith's, Sudeck's).
  • Portal Hypertension (Portal pressure >5-10 mmHg)
    • Causes: Pre- (PVT), Intra- (cirrhosis), Post-hepatic (Budd-Chiari).
    • Consequences: Varices (esoph, gastric, rectal), ascites, splenomegaly, caput medusae. Portal Hypertension and Caput Medusae
  • Compression Syndromes
    • Nutcracker: L. renal vein compressed (SMA & aorta).
    • SMA Syndrome: Duodenum (D3) compressed (SMA & aorta).

⭐ Most common AAA site: infrarenal (↓ vasa vasorum, ↓ elastin).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Celiac trunk supplies foregut; branches: Left Gastric, Splenic, Common Hepatic arteries.
  • Superior Mesenteric Artery (SMA) supplies midgut derivatives; watch for SMA syndrome.
  • Inferior Mesenteric Artery (IMA) supplies hindgut derivatives; Marginal Artery of Drummond is key anastomosis.
  • Portal vein is formed by Splenic vein and SMV; crucial in portal hypertension.
  • Key portocaval anastomoses: esophageal varices, caput medusae, internal hemorrhoids.
  • Left renal vein passes between SMA and aorta (Nutcracker syndrome); gonadal arteries arise from aorta.

Practice Questions: Abdominal Vasculature

Test your understanding with these related questions

The aortic hiatus is formed by the right and left crura of the diaphragm. Which of the following structures does NOT pass through the aortic hiatus?

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Flashcards: Abdominal Vasculature

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Structures at the renal hilum from anterior to posterior: (3)_____

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Structures at the renal hilum from anterior to posterior: (3)_____

Vein, artery, pelvis

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