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Published in: Anatomical Science International 4/2015

01-09-2015 | Original Article

A study of fundamental courses in the great cardiac vein

Authors: Akimitsu Ishizawa, Sayaka Tateishi, Ming Zhou, Ryoji Suzuki, Hiroshi Abe

Published in: Anatomical Science International | Issue 4/2015

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Abstract

We studied an extremely rare great cardiac vein anomaly in a 65-year-old woman during dissection practice at the Akita University School of Medicine (2013). The great cardiac vein has two main roots, one accompanied by a left marginal vein that pours into the coronary sinus, and the other ascending along the anterior interventricular sulcus from the apex, and running over the circumflex branch of the left coronary artery. It then runs along the atrial side of the transverse sinus of the pericardium, and drains directly into the superior vena cava. No anastomosis between these veins was evident. The great cardiac vein might originate from two venous systems, one in the posterior wall of the left ventricle, and the other running along the anterior interventricular sulcus. These venous systems flow in the venous network of the left edge of the coronary sulcus. The former venous system always selected the course, which went to the coronary sinus in the venous network. The latter system may drain into one of the following four courses: the first one contacts the former course; the second passes to the transverse sinus of the pericardium and flows to the (right) superior vena cava; the third passes between a pulmonary trunk and ascending aorta from the dorsum of the pulmonary trunk, turns around in a ventral aspect, and then flows into the left superior vena cava; and the fourth flows to the anterior cardiac vein. The first of these belongs to the normal great cardiac vein, but the others are anomalous.
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Metadata
Title
A study of fundamental courses in the great cardiac vein
Authors
Akimitsu Ishizawa
Sayaka Tateishi
Ming Zhou
Ryoji Suzuki
Hiroshi Abe
Publication date
01-09-2015
Publisher
Springer Japan
Published in
Anatomical Science International / Issue 4/2015
Print ISSN: 1447-6959
Electronic ISSN: 1447-073X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12565-014-0268-4

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