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  2. Left gastric artery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Left_gastric_artery

    In terms of disease, the left gastric artery may be involved in peptic ulcer disease: if an ulcer erodes through the stomach mucosa into a branch of the artery, this can cause massive blood loss into the stomach, which may result in such symptoms as hematemesis or melaena.

  3. Curvatures of the stomach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curvatures_of_the_stomach

    The greater curvature, which begins at the cardiac notch, and arches backwards, passing inferiorly to the left, [1] is four or five times longer than the lesser curvature, [2] which attaches to the hepatogastric ligament and is supplied by the left gastric artery and right gastric branch of the hepatic artery. [1]

  4. Esophageal branches of left gastric artery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esophageal_branches_of...

    The esophageal branches of left gastric artery are branches which supply the esophagus. External links. celiactrunk at The Anatomy Lesson by Wesley Norman ...

  5. Gastroduodenal artery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gastroduodenal_artery

    The gastroduodenal artery can be the source of a significant gastrointestinal bleed, which may arise as a complication of peptic ulcer disease.Because of its close relationship to the posteromedial wall of the second part of the duodenum, deeply penetrating ulcers or tumours of the duodenum may cause torrential bleeding from the gastroduodenal ‘artery of haemorrhage'. [1]

  6. Short gastric arteries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short_gastric_arteries

    The short gastric arteries are 5-7 small branches of the splenic artery [1] that pass along part of the greater curvature of the stomach [2] from left to right between the layers of the gastrosplenic ligament, and are distributed to the greater curvature of the stomach.

  7. Stomach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stomach

    The stomach bed refers to the structures upon which the stomach rests in mammals. [11] [12] These include the tail of the pancreas, splenic artery, left kidney, left suprarenal gland, transverse colon and its mesocolon, and the left crus of diaphragm, and the left colic flexure. The term was introduced around 1896 by Philip Polson of the ...

  8. Left gastric vein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Left_gastric_vein

    The left gastric vein runs from right to left along the lesser curvature of the stomach. [2] It passes to the esophageal opening of the stomach, where it receives some esophageal veins. [2] It then turns backward and passes from left to right behind the omental bursa. It drains into the portal vein near the superior border of the pancreas. [2]

  9. Left gastroepiploic artery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Left_gastroepiploic_artery

    The left gastroepiploic artery (or left gastro-omental artery), the largest branch of the splenic artery, runs from left to right about a finger's breadth or more from the greater curvature of the stomach, between the layers of the greater omentum, and anastomoses with the right gastroepiploic (a branch of the right gastro-duodenal artery originating from the hepatic branch of the coeliac trunk).