Coronary sinus

Changed by Craig Hacking, 20 Dec 2016

Updates to Article Attributes

Body was changed:

Thecoronary sinus is the major coronary vein. It returns the majority of the left ventricular blood flow to the right atrium.

Gross anatomy

The coronary sinus courses along the posterior wall of the left atrium into the left atrioventricular groove. It normally drains into the right atrium. The ostium of the coronary sinus is partially covered by the thebesian valve.

Veins draining into the coronary sinus are highly variable, but may include:

Development

The coronary sinus develops from one of the two sinus horns of the sinus venosum. The other horn becomes part of the right atrium. The right venous valve of the sinus venosum develops into the thebesian valve and the Eustachian valve.

Variant anatomy

  • the coronary sinus may act as a conduit between a persistent left superior vena cava and the right atrium
  • rarely, the coronary sinus may drain into the left atrium, causing a left to left shunt

Related pathology pathology

The coronary sinus may be involved in a number of different pathologic processes:

  • -<p>The <strong>coronary sinus</strong> is the major coronary vein. It returns the majority of the left ventricular blood flow to the right atrium.</p><h4>Gross anatomy</h4><p>The coronary sinus courses along the posterior wall of the left atrium into the left atrioventricular groove. It normally drains into the right atrium. The ostium of the coronary sinus is partially covered by the thebesian valve.</p><p>Veins draining into the coronary sinus are highly variable, but may include:</p><ul>
  • -<li>vein of Marshall (oblique vein of the left atrium)</li>
  • +<p>The <strong>coronary sinus</strong> is the major <a title="Coronary veins" href="/articles/coronary-veins">coronary vein</a>. It returns the majority of the <a title="Left ventricle" href="/articles/left-ventricle">left ventricular</a> blood flow to the <a title="Right atrium" href="/articles/right-atrium">right atrium</a>.</p><h4>Gross anatomy</h4><p>The coronary sinus courses along the posterior wall of the left atrium into the left atrioventricular groove. It normally drains into the right atrium. The ostium of the coronary sinus is partially covered by the thebesian valve.</p><p>Veins draining into the coronary sinus are highly variable, but may include:</p><ul>
  • +<li>
  • +<a title="vein of Marshall" href="/articles/vein-of-marshall">vein of Marshall</a> (oblique vein of the left atrium)</li>
  • -</ul><h4>Related pathology</h4><p>The coronary sinus may be involved in a number of different pathologic processes:</p><ul>
  • +</ul><h4>Related pathology</h4><p>The coronary sinus may be involved in a number of different pathologic processes:</p><ul>
  • -<li>the coronary sinus may be an ablation target for some arrhythmia/dysrhythmias (e.g. Wolff-Parkinson White)</li>
  • -<li>the coronary sinus rarely may have an abnormal connection to the left atrium on its way to the right atrium (<a href="/articles/unroofed-coronary-sinus">unroofed coronary sinus</a>), a rare kind of <a href="/articles/atrial-septal-defect-2">atrial septal defect</a><ul><li>associated with <a href="/articles/heterotaxy-syndrome">heterotaxy syndromes</a> and <a href="/articles/left-sided-superior-vena-cava-1">persistent left-sided SVC</a>
  • +<li>the coronary sinus may be an ablation target for some arrhythmia/dysrhythmias (e.g. Wolff-Parkinson White)</li>
  • +<li>the coronary sinus rarely may have an abnormal connection to the left atrium on its way to the right atrium (<a href="/articles/unroofed-coronary-sinus">unroofed coronary sinus</a>), a rare kind of <a href="/articles/atrial-septal-defect-2">atrial septal defect</a><ul><li>associated with <a href="/articles/heterotaxy-syndrome">heterotaxy syndromes</a> and <a href="/articles/left-sided-superior-vena-cava-1">persistent left-sided SVC</a>

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