Basal vein

Basal vein
Choroid plexus (basal veins not labeled, but visible draining into great cerebral vein)
Details
Drains toGreat cerebral vein
Identifiers
Latinvena basalis
TA98A12.3.06.018
TA24916
FMA50990
Anatomical terminology
[edit on Wikidata]

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 great cerebral vein; it receives tributaries from the interpeduncular fossa, the inferior horn of the lateral ventricle, the hippocampal gyrus, and the mid-brain.

References

Public domain This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 653 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

  • Diagram at ucla.edu


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