Barbaix E, Kerckaert I, D'herde K, Depreter M, Espeel M
University of Gent, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Human Anatomy and Embryology, Gent, Belgium.
Clin Anat. 2003 Mar;16(2):176-81. doi: 10.1002/ca.10079.
A case is presented of a combination of anatomical anomalies found in a 67-year-old female cadaver during routine dissection by medical students. They include a thyromediastinal muscle, a truncus bicaroticobrachialis, and a left superior vena cava, with complete absence of the right superior vena cava, but with a normal azygos vein opening into the right atrium at the expected site of entry of the superior vena cava. No associated congenital cardiac malformations were found. Clinical implications include the difficulty of heart catheterization through the subclavian veins and misleading images on CT or MRI scans, where the azygos vein could be mistaken for a right superior vena cava.
本文报告了医学生在对一名67岁女性尸体进行常规解剖时发现的一组解剖学异常组合。这些异常包括一条甲状腺纵隔肌、一条双侧颈总动脉臂干和一条左上腔静脉,右侧上腔静脉完全缺如,但奇静脉在正常上腔静脉进入右心房的预期位置开口。未发现相关的先天性心脏畸形。临床意义包括经锁骨下静脉进行心脏导管插入术的困难以及CT或MRI扫描上的误导性图像,其中奇静脉可能被误认为是右上腔静脉。