Posterior cardinal vein

The postcardinal veins or posterior cardinal veins join with the corresponding right and left cardinal veins to form the left common cardinal veins, which empty in the sinus venosus. In the development of a human embryo, most of the posterior cardinal veins regress, and what remains of them forms the renal segment of the inferior vena cava and the common iliac veins. Later in the development stages, the posterior cardinal veins are replaced by the subcardinal and supracardinal veins. The subcardinal veins form part of the inferior vena cava, the renal veins and the gonadal veins. The supracardinal veins form part of the inferior vena cava, the intercostal veins, the hemiazygos vein and the azygos vein.[1]

Posterior cardinal vein
Scheme of arrangement of parietal veins.
Human embryo with heart and anterior body-wall removed to show the sinus venosus and its tributaries.
Details
Carnegie stage13
SystemCardiovascular system
Identifiers
LatinVena postcardinalis
TEcardinal vein_by_E5.11.2.2.2.2.19 E5.11.2.2.2.2.19
Anatomical terminology

Additional images

See also

References

This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 520 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

  1. Henry Gray (1918). Anatomy of the Human Body, page 520.


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