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Intercostal lymph nodes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Intercostal lymph nodes
Deep lymph nodes and vessels of the thorax and abdomen (diagrammatic). Afferent vessels are represented by continuous lines, and efferent and internodular vessels by dotted lines. (Intercostal nodes and vessels labeled at center left.)
Details
SystemLymphatic system
Drains toRight lymphatic duct, thoracic duct
Identifiers
Latinnodi lymphoidei intercostales
Anatomical terminology

The intercostal lymph nodes (intercostal glands) occupy the posterior parts of the intercostal spaces, in relation to the intercostal vessels.

They receive the deep lymphatics from the postero-lateral aspect of the chest; some of these vessels are interrupted by small lateral intercostal glands.

  • The efferents of the glands in the lower four or five spaces unite to form a trunk, which descends and opens either into the cisterna chyli or into the commencement of the thoracic duct.
  • The efferents of the glands in the upper spaces of the left side end in the thoracic duct; those of the corresponding right spaces, in the right lymphatic duct.

References

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Public domain This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 715 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)