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Omental foramen

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(Redirected from Foramen of Winslow) Part of the human abdomen
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Omental foramen
Horizontal disposition of the peritoneum in the upper part of the abdomen.
Entry to omental bursa (black arrow) by omental foramen (white mark)
Details
Identifiers
Latinforamen omentale
TA98A10.1.02.403
TA23704
FMA14711
Anatomical terminology[edit on Wikidata]

In human anatomy, the omental foramen (epiploic foramen, foramen of Winslow after the anatomist Jacob B. Winslow, or uncommonly aditus; Latin: Foramen epiploicum) is the passage of communication, or foramen, between the greater sac, and the lesser sac of the peritoneal cavity.

Borders

It has the following borders:

As the portal vein is the most posterior structure in the hepatoduodenal ligament, and the inferior vena cava lies under the posterior wall, the epiploic foramen can be remembered as lying between the two great veins of the abdomen.

Additional images

  • Vertical disposition of the peritoneum. Main cavity, red; omental bursa, blue. (Bristle in omental foramen labeled at upper left.) Vertical disposition of the peritoneum. Main cavity, red; omental bursa, blue. (Bristle in omental foramen labeled at upper left.)
  • Diagram to show the lines along which the peritoneum leaves the wall of the abdomen to invest the viscera. Diagram to show the lines along which the peritoneum leaves the wall of the abdomen to invest the viscera.
  • Epiploic foramen Epiploic foramen

See also

References

Public domain This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 1156 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)


External links

Anatomy of the peritoneum and mesentery
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Abdominal
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ventral mesentery
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dorsal mesentery
Abdominal cavity
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