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yes, but it's actually called a celiac artery. This is entirely wrong. The celiac artery is an entirely different structure. The celiac artery supplies oxygenated blood to the foregut (stomach, the first ~1/2 of the duodenum and various accessory GI organs). These organs are drained by the splenic vein and smaller tributaries to the hepatic portal system. There is no celiac vein.
Also called the portal splenic confluence. This is the area where the splenic vein meets the superior mesenteric vein. Together, posterior to the neck of the pancreas, these veins form the portal vein.
blood
The splenic vein (a part of the portal vein), is connected to the renal vein.
AnswerThe portal confluence is the area where the superior mesenteric vein and the splenic vein meet. They run posterior to the pancreas and form the portal vein.
The Inferior Mesenteric Vein (iMV) drains into the splenic vein. The splenic vein ultimately "meets up" with the Superior Mesenteric Vein (SMV) to form the Hepatic Portal Vein (HPV)
Splenic vein and superior mesenteric vein.
yes
The hepatic portal vein is created by the anastamoses between the superior mesenteric vein and spleinc vein. It is arguable that the inferior mesenteric vein joins at this same anastomoses but generally it actually joins the splenic vein which then meats the sup. mesenteric vein as stated above. The veins that drain into the portal vein (ie above the ansastmoses between the splenic and sup. mesenteric) are the cystic vein, the right gastric vein and the posterior-superior part of the pancreaticoduodenal vein.
inferior mesentaric and splenic
Hepatic vein
It is used to diagnose blockages in the splenic vein and portal-vein thrombosis and to assess the patency and location of the vascular system prior to liver transplantation.