Dural venous sinuses

43,108 views 38 slides Mar 01, 2016
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About This Presentation

Dural venous sinuses


Slide Content

DURAL VENOUS SINUSES

Dural venous sinuses

Characteristic feature of dural venous
sinuses

•Lined by endothelium, no muscular coat &
valveless.
•Collect blood from brain,meninges, orbit,internal
ear & diploe.
•Connected to valveless emissary veins to
maintain the internal & external venous pressure.
•Projection of arachnoid granulation into it for CSF
absorption.

Superior ,inferior & straight sinus

Superior sagittal sinus
•Begins at crista galli
•Ends at internal
occipital protubernce
dilated to form
^confluence of sinuses_
( Trocula Herophili)
•3 venous lacunae

•Tributaries :
•Superior cerbral vein- 8-
12
•Emissary vein
•Communications :
•Veins of scalp
•Vein from nasal cavity
through patent foramen
caecum
•Cavernous sinus

Clinical significance
•Infection from scalp, nasal cavity & diploic
tissue  septic thrombosis  CSF
absorption  ICT

Straight sinus

Straight sinus
•Location : junction of falx cerebri & tentorium
cerebelli
•Terminate into left transvese sinus &
connected to confluence
•Tributaries :
1.Inferior sagittal sinus
2.Few superior cerebellar veins
3.Great cerebral vein ( vein of Galen)

Paired sinus

Paired sinuses
•Transverse sinuses
•Posterior attached margin
of tentorium cerebelli
•Continues below as
sigmoid sinus •Tributaries :
1.Superior petrosal
2.Inferior cerebral &
cerebellar veins
•Sigmoid sinuses
•Exit skull through
posterior compartment of
jugular foramen
•Continues with superior
bulb of internal jugular
vein
•Tributaries:
1.Mastoid & condylar
emissary veins
2.Cerebellar vein
3.Labyrinthine vein

Cavernous sinus
•Formation : cephalic
part of primary head
vein
•2x 1 cm
•Roof & lateral wall :
meningeal layer
•Floor & medial wall :
endosteal layer
•RELATIONS

Carotid siphon

CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE
•Septic thrombosis
•Pulsating exophthalmous

Cavernous sinus
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