Stomach, Liver, Pancreas, Etc.

Illustration from 'Surgical Anatomy: The Treatise of the Human Anatomy and Its Applications to the Practice of Medicine and Surgery, volume III' (by Dr. John Blair Deaver) shows how the blood supply of the stomach is derived from the gastric, pyloric, right and left gastro-epiploic arteries, and the vasa brevia, 1903. These vessels supply the muscular coat and the ramify in the submucous layer, where they break up into small vessels for final distribution to the mucous coat. The pancreas if a long, slender organ extending form the second portion if the duodenum through the epigastric region, to the hilum of the spleen, in the left hypochondriac region. The phrenic arteries is contradistinction to the phrenic branches of the internal mammary artery- are two slender vessels which arise very irregulary from the abdominal aorta, either above or below the celiac axis. The celiac axis is a short, thick, trunk which arises from the front of the aorta immediately below the aortic opening in the diaphragm. The gastric artery, the smallest branch of th celiac axis, passes upward and to the left behind th ascending layer of the posterior parietal peritoneum, to the cardiac end of the lesser curvature of the stomach. . (Photo by VintageMedStock/Getty Images)
Illustration from 'Surgical Anatomy: The Treatise of the Human Anatomy and Its Applications to the Practice of Medicine and Surgery, volume III' (by Dr. John Blair Deaver) shows how the blood supply of the stomach is derived from the gastric, pyloric, right and left gastro-epiploic arteries, and the vasa brevia, 1903. These vessels supply the muscular coat and the ramify in the submucous layer, where they break up into small vessels for final distribution to the mucous coat. The pancreas if a long, slender organ extending form the second portion if the duodenum through the epigastric region, to the hilum of the spleen, in the left hypochondriac region. The phrenic arteries is contradistinction to the phrenic branches of the internal mammary artery- are two slender vessels which arise very irregulary from the abdominal aorta, either above or below the celiac axis. The celiac axis is a short, thick, trunk which arises from the front of the aorta immediately below the aortic opening in the diaphragm. The gastric artery, the smallest branch of th celiac axis, passes upward and to the left behind th ascending layer of the posterior parietal peritoneum, to the cardiac end of the lesser curvature of the stomach. . (Photo by VintageMedStock/Getty Images)
Stomach, Liver, Pancreas, Etc.
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Credit:
VintageMedStock / Contributor
Editorial #:
148361328
Collection:
Archive Photos
Date created:
January 01, 1903
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Source:
Archive Photos
Object name:
T1674624_150
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