Terminology Service for NFDI4Health

median sacral artery

Go to external page http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/UBERON_0005464


The median sacral artery (or middle sacral artery) is a small vessel, which arises from the back of the aorta, a little above its bifurcation. It descends in the middle line in front of the fourth and fifth lumbar vertebræ, the sacrum and coccyx, and ends in the glomus coccygeum (coccygeal gland). From it, minute branches are said to pass to the posterior surface of the rectum. On the last lumbar vertebra it anastomoses with the lumbar branch of the iliolumbar artery; in front of the sacrum it anastomoses with the lateral sacral arteries, and sends offsets into the anterior sacral foramina. It is crossed by the left common iliac vein, and is accompanied by a pair of venæ comitantes; these unite to form a single vessel, which opens into the left common iliac vein. [ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Median_sacral_artery ]

Term info

Label

median sacral artery

Synonyms
  • Middle sacral artery
database cross reference
depicted by

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/af/Gray531.png

has related synonym

middle sacral artery, arteria sacralis mediana, coccygeal branches, middle sacral

id

UBERON:0005464

Term relations