Internal thoracic vein
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Vein: Internal thoracic vein | ||
|---|---|---|
| Veins of the thorax and abdomen. The internal thoracic veins drain into the brachiocephalic veins.] | ||
| Posterior surface of sternum and costal cartilages, showing Transversus thoracis. (Internal mammary vessels labeled at center top.) | ||
| Latin | vena thoracica interna | |
| Gray's | subject #172 666 | |
| Drains from | superior epigastric vein | |
| Drains to | brachiocephalic vein | |
| Dorlands/Elsevier | v_05/12852014 | |
In human anatomy, the internal thoracic vein (previously known as the internal mammary vein) is a vessel that drains the chest wall and mamma, a term used for breast in anatomy.
Bilaterally, it arises from the superior epigastric vein, accompanies the internal thoracic artery along its course and terminates in the brachiocephalic vein.
[edit] Additional images
[edit] External links
- GPnotebook -489684934
- Dictionary at eMedicine internal+thoracic+vein
- Internal thoracic vein - thefreedictionary.com



