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Occipital artery

 
Sci-Tech Dictionary: occipital artery
(äk′sip·əd·əl ¦ärd·ə·rē)

(anatomy) A branch of the external carotid which branches into the mastoid, auricular, sternocleidomastoid, and meningeal arteries.


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n.
  1. An artery with origin in the external carotid artery, and with sternocleidomastoid, muscular, meningeal, auricular, occipital, mastoid, and descending branches.
  2. An artery that is one of the terminal branches of the posterior cerebral artery and supplies lateral portions of the temporal lobe; lateral occipital artery.
  3. An artery that is one of the terminal branches of the posterior cerebral artery, with distribution by several branches to the corpus callosum and portions of the occipital lobe, including the visual cortex; medial occipital artery.
Wikipedia: Occipital artery
Top
Artery: Occipital artery
Gray508.png
The arteries of the face and scalp. (Occipital visible at center left.)
Occipital artery.PNG
Superficial dissection of the right side of the neck, showing the carotid and subclavian arteries.
Latin arteria occipitalis
Gray's subject #144 556
Supplies occiput, scalp
Source external carotid artery   
Drain occipital vein

The occipital artery arises from the external carotid artery opposite the facial artery, its path is below the posterior belly of digastric to the occipital region. This artery supplies blood to the back of the scalp and sterno-mastoid muscles. Other muscles it supplies are deep muscles in the back and neck.

Contents

Course and Relations

At its origin, it is covered by the posterior belly of the Digastricus and the Stylohyoideus, and the hypoglossal nerve winds around it from behind forward; higher up, it crosses the internal carotid artery, the internal jugular vein, and the vagus and accessory nerves.

It next ascends to the interval between the transverse process of the atlas and the mastoid process of the temporal bone, and passes horizontally backward, grooving the surface of the latter bone, being covered by the Sternocleidomastoideus, Splenius capitis, Longissimus capitis, and Digastricus, and resting upon the Rectus capitis lateralis, the Obliquus superior, and Semispinalis capitis.

It then changes its course and runs vertically upward, pierces the fascia connecting the cranial attachment of the Trapezius with the Sternocleidomastoideus, and ascends in a tortuous course in the superficial fascia of the scalp, where it divides into numerous branches, which reach as high as the vertex of the skull and anastomose with the posterior auricular and superficial temporal arteries.

Branches

  1. Sternocleidomastoid branch
  2. Auricular branch
  3. Mastoid branch
  4. Descending branches
  5. Occipital branches

Its terminal portion is accompanied by the greater occipital nerve.

Additional images

External links

This article was originally based on an entry from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy. As such, some of the information contained within it may be outdated.


 
 

 

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Sci-Tech Dictionary. McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms. Copyright © 2003, 1994, 1989, 1984, 1978, 1976, 1974 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Occipital artery" Read more