Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
At this point it is continued as the corresponding transverse sinus.
Running transversely on either side is a groove for the transverse sinus.
Blood arriving at this point then proceeds to drain into the left and right transverse sinuses.
The transverse sinuses pass horizontally from the most posterior point of the occiput.
The transverse sinuses travel along this groove.
It crosses and anastomoses at its two ends with the middle cerebral vein and the transverse sinus.
It drains (from the center of the brain) to the straight sinus (at the back of the head), which connects to the transverse sinuses.
Right and left transverse sinuses which meet at the confluence of sinuses (marked by the internal occipital protuberance).
It receives blood from the cavernous sinus and passes backward and laterally to drain into the transverse sinus.
They drain from the transverse sinuses (under the back of the brain) and converge with the inferior petrosal sinuses to form the internal jugular vein.
The sigmoid sinus, which continues the transverse sinus, empties into the jugular vein at the jugular foramen.
Along the internal surface of the occipital bone, running laterally between superior and inferior fossae of the cruciate eminence is the groove for transverse sinus.
The transverse sinuses (left and right lateral sinuses), within the human head, are two areas beneath the brain which allow blood to drain from the back of the head.
The petrosquamous sinus, when present, runs backward along the junction of the squama and petrous portion of the temporal, and opens into the transverse sinus.
Where the apex of the petrous temporal meets the squamous temporal, the transverse sinuses lead into sigmoid (S-shaped) sinuses (one on each side).
The superior sagittal sinus often drains into (either exclusively or predominantly) one transverse sinus, and the straight sinus drains into the other.
The inferior cerebral veins are veins that drain the undersurface of the cerebral hemispheres and empty into the cavernous and transverse sinuses.
The groove for the transverse sinus is separated from the innermost of the mastoid air cells by a very thin lamina of bone, and even this may be partly deficient.
Cerebral angiography showed a right moyamoya pattern and an ipsilateral dural AVF fed by branches of the external carotid artery and draining into the transverse sinus.
The transverse sinuses are frequently of unequal size, with the one formed by the superior sagittal sinus being the larger; they increase in size as they proceed, from back to center.
The passage between the venous and arterial mesocardia-i.e., between the aorta and pulmonary artery in front and the superior vena cava behind-is termed the transverse sinus.
In Troodon formosus "the transverse sinus probably drained into a middle cerebral vein that exited the brain in the ridge present on the dorsal edge of the trigeminal foramen."
From here, two transverse sinuses bifurcate and travel laterally and inferiorly in an S-shaped curve that form the sigmoid sinuses which go on to form the two jugular veins.
The transverse sinuses are of large size and begin at the internal occipital protuberance; one, generally the right, being the direct continuation of the superior sagittal sinus, the other of the straight sinus.