Renal vein

The renal veins are veins that drain the kidney. They connect the kidney to the inferior vena cava. They carry the blood filtered by the kidney.

Renal vein
The anterior surfaces of the kidneys, showing the areas of contact of neighboring viscera.
Details
Drains fromkidney
Sourceinterlobar veins
Drains toinferior vena cava
ArteryRenal artery
Identifiers
Latinvenae renales
MeSHD012082
TA98A12.3.09.009
TA25000, 5006
FMA14334
Anatomical terminology

Structure

There is one vein per kidney, that divides into 4 divisions upon entering the kidney:

  • the anterior branch which receives blood from the anterior portion of the kidney and,
  • the posterior branch which receives blood from the posterior portion.

Because the inferior vena cava is on the right half of the body, the left renal vein is generally the longer of the two.

Because the inferior vena cava is not laterally symmetrical, the left renal vein often receives the following veins:[1]

This is in contrast to the right side of the body, where these veins drain directly into the IVC.

Often, each renal vein will have a branch that receives blood from the ureter.

Variation

It is usually singular to each kidney, except in the condition "multiple renal veins".[2] In some people the left renal vein passes behind the abdominal aorta instead of in front of it, this is termed a retroaortic left renal vein, which is also known as "The Vein of Schnitker." If there is both a vein passing in front of and one behind the aorta this is called a circumaortic renal vein.

Clinical significance

Diseases associated with the renal vein include renal vein thrombosis (RVT) and nutcracker syndrome (renal vein entrapment syndrome).

Additional images

See also

References

  1. Dissector Answers - Kidney & Retroperitoneum Archived 2007-11-09 at the Wayback Machine
  2. "Multiple renal veins". Medcyclopaedia. GE. Archived from the original on 2012-02-05.
  • Anatomy figure: 40:06-05 at Human Anatomy Online, SUNY Downstate Medical Center - "Retroperitoneal structures on the posterior abdominal wall."
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