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Deep external pudendal artery

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One of the pudendal arteries in human anatomy Blood vessel
Deep external pudendal artery
The left femoral triangle. (Deep external pudendal vessels labeled at upper left.)
Scheme of the femoral artery with segments and branches (deep external pudendal artery labeled at upper right)
Details
SourceFemoral artery
VeinExternal pudendal vein
Identifiers
Latinarteria pudenda externa profunda
TA98A12.2.16.014
TA24678
FMA20739
Anatomical terminology[edit on Wikidata]

The deep external pudendal artery (deep external pudic artery) is one of the pudendal arteries that is more deeply seated than the superficial external pudendal artery, passes medially across the pectineus and the adductor longus muscles; it is covered by the fascia lata, which it pierces at the medial side of the thigh, and is distributed, in the male, to the integument of the scrotum and perineum, in the female to the labia majora; its branches anastomose with the scrotal or labial branches of the perineal artery.

Additional images

  • Schema of the arteries arising from the external iliac and femoral arteries Schema of the arteries arising from the external iliac and femoral arteries

See also

References

Public domain This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 629 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

External links

Arteries of the human leg
Inferior epigastric
Deep circumflex iliac
  • no major branches
Femoral
In femoral canal
Descending genicular
  • saphenous branch
  • articular branches
Deep femoral artery
Popliteal
Genicular
Sural
  • no major branches
Anterior tibial
Tibial-fibular (Tibial-peroneal) trunk
Arches
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