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The lumbar trunks are formed by the union of the efferent vessels from the lateral aortic lymph nodes. They receive the lymph from the lower limbs, from the walls and viscera of the pelvis, from the kidneys and suprarenal glands and the deep lymphatics of the greater part of the abdominal wall.
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The nodes also provide lymphatic vessel extensions that form lumbar trunks on both sides. The left lumbar trunk of the nodes receives drainage from the intestinal trunk. The lumbar...
Lumbar lymph trunks are the lower pair of lymph trunks that drain lymph fluid from the legs, pelvic region, and kidneys. Intestinal lymph trunk is the unpaired lymph trunk that receives chyle (lymph mixed with fats) from the intestines.
The lumbosacral trunk is a thick nervous band that arises from the merger of the anterior/ventral rami of the last two lumbar spinal nerves (L4 and L5). Upon originating, the trunk descends over the wing (ala) of the sacrum and joins the sacral spinal nerves to form the sacral plexus.
The lumbosacral trunk is a collection of neural fibers originating from L4 and L5 ventral rami and interconnecting the lumbar and sacral nerve plexi. Lumbosacral nerve fibers run on the medial side of the psoas major muscle, then inferiorly over the pelvic brim to join the first sacral nerve.
Lymph from abdominal organs reaches the lumbar (right, left) and intestinal lymphatic trunks bypassing via relay lymph nodes surrounding the great abdominal vessels. These trunks unite at the cisterna chyli, forming the thoracic (left lymphatic) duct.
The thoracic duct itself begins just beneath the diaphragm in the cisterna chyli, a sac-like chamber that receives lymph from the lower abdomen, pelvis, and lower limbs by way of the left and right lumbar trunks and the intestinal trunk.
The lumbosacral trunk is the distal trunk of the lumbar plexus arising from the anterior rami of the L4 and L5 nerve roots which contributes to the sacral plexus. Gross anatomy Origin
The lumbosacral trunk is nervous tissue that connects the lumbar plexus with the sacral plexus. It is formed by the union of parts of the fourth and fifth lumbar nerves and descends to join the sacral plexus.