Intervertebral veins

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The intervertebral veins accompany the spinal nerves through the

external vertebral venous plexuses.[1] They drain (in craniocaudal sequence) into vertebral vein, intercostal veins, lumbar veins, and lateral sacral veins. Upper posterior intercostal veins may additionally drain via brachiocephalic vens. They may drain to ascending lumbar veins. They may drain into the inferior vena cava directly, reaching it by winding around the surface of the vertebral body.[2]

It is unclear whether intervertebral veins contain functional venous valves; blood flow through intervertebral veins may be reversible, suggesting a possible mechanism for metastatic spread of e.g. prostatic cancer to the spine during temporary blood flow reversals (e.g. during periods of elevated intra-abdominal pressure or during postural alterations).[2]

Anatomy

Fate

Their drainage depends upon the part of the body:

References

  1. .
  2. ^
    OCLC 1201341621.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link
    )

External links