552 



THE BLOOD-VASCULAR SYSTEM. 



of the stomach, forming the lower boundary of the foramen of Winslow. It then 

 passes upward between the layers of the lesser omentum, and in front of the fora- 

 men of Winslow, to the transverse fissure of the liver, where it divides into two 

 branches, right and left, which supply the corresponding lobes of that organ, 

 accompanying the ramifications of the vena portse and hepatic duct. The hepatic 

 artery, in its course along the right border of the lesser omentum, is in relation 

 with the ductus communis choledochus and portal veins, the duct lying to the 

 right of the artery and the vena portse behind. 

 Its branches are the 



Pyloric. 



Gastro-duodenalis 



Cystic. 



The pyloric branch arises from the hepatic, above the pylorus, descends to the 

 pyloric end of the stomach, and passes from right to left along its lesser curvature, 



to Great 



f Gastro-epiploica Dextra. 



\ Pancreatico-duodenalis Superior. 



FIG. 309. The cceliac axis and its branches, the stomach having been raised and the transverse meso-colon 

 removed (semi-diagrammatic). 



supplying it with branches and inosculating with the gastric branches of the coro- 

 nary artery. 



The gastro-duodenalis (Fig. 309) is a short but large branch, which descends, 

 near the pylorus, behind the first portion of the duodenum, and divides at the 

 lower border of this viscus into two branches, the gastro-epiploica d extra and the 

 panereatico-duodenalis superior. Previous to its division, it gives off two or three 

 small inferior pyloric branches to the pyloric end of the stomach and pancreas. 



