Basal vein

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Basal vein
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Choroid plexus (basal veins not labeled, but visible draining into great cerebral vein)
Details
Latin Vena basalis
Drains to
Internal cerebral vein
Identifiers
Dorlands
/Elsevier
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Anatomical terminology
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The basal vein is a vein in the brain. It is formed at the anterior perforated substance by the union of

  • (a) a small anterior cerebral vein which accompanies the anterior cerebral artery and supplies the medial surface of the frontal lobe by the fronto-basal vein.
  • (b) the deep middle cerebral vein (deep Sylvian vein), which receives tributaries from the insula and neighboring gyri, and runs in the lower part of the lateral cerebral fissure, and
  • (c) the inferior striate veins, which leave the corpus striatum through the anterior perforated substance.

The basal vein passes backward around the cerebral peduncle, and ends in the internal cerebral vein (vein of Galen); it receives tributaries from the interpeduncular fossa, the inferior horn of the lateral ventricle, the hippocampal gyrus, and the mid-brain.

References

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

External links


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