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Right gastric artery

The right gastric artery arises, in most cases (53% of cases), from the proper hepatic artery, descends to the pyloric end of the stomach, and passes from right to left along its lesser curvature, supplying it with branches, and anastomosing with the left gastric artery. It can also arise from the region of division of the common hepatic artery (20% of cases), the left branch of the hepatic artery (15% of cases), the gastroduodenal artery (8% of cases), and most rarely, the common hepatic artery itself (4% of cases).The celiac artery and its branches; the liver has been raised, and the lesser omentum and anterior layer of the greater omentum removed.Right gastric artery The right gastric artery arises, in most cases (53% of cases), from the proper hepatic artery, descends to the pyloric end of the stomach, and passes from right to left along its lesser curvature, supplying it with branches, and anastomosing with the left gastric artery. It can also arise from the region of division of the common hepatic artery (20% of cases), the left branch of the hepatic artery (15% of cases), the gastroduodenal artery (8% of cases), and most rarely, the common hepatic artery itself (4% of cases). This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 604 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

[ "Common hepatic artery", "Gastroduodenal artery", "Left gastric artery", "Accessory left gastric artery", "Supraduodenal artery" ]
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