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Superficial external pudendal artery

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Superficial external pudendal artery
The left femoral triangle. (Superficial external pudendal vessels labeled at upper left.)
Scheme of the femoral artery. (Superficial external pudendal artery labeled at upper right.)
Details
SourceFemoral artery
VeinExternal pudendal vein
Identifiers
Latinarteria pudenda externa superficialis
TA98A12.2.16.013
TA24677
FMA20738
Anatomical terminology

The superficial external pudendal artery (superficial external pudic artery) is one of the three pudendal arteries. It arises from the medial side of the femoral artery, close to the superficial epigastric artery and superficial iliac circumflex artery.

Course and target

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After piercing the femoral sheath and fascia cribrosa, it courses medialward, across the spermatic cord (or round ligament in the female), to be distributed to the integument on the lower part of the abdomen, the scrotum in the male, and the labium majus in the female, anastomosing with branches of the internal pudendal artery. It crosses superficial to the inguinal ligament.

See also

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Additional images

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References

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Public domain This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 629 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

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