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Paramesenteric gutters

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Not to be confused with the paracolic gutters, which are recesses between the colon and the abdominal wall.
Paramesenteric gutters
Diagram devised by Delépine to show the lines along which the peritoneum leaves the wall of the abdomen to invest the viscera.
Anatomical terminology[edit on Wikidata]

The paramesenteric gutters (paramesenteric recesses or infracolic spaces) are two peritoneal recesses – spaces in the abdominal cavity between the colon and the root of the mesentery. There are two paramesenteric gutters; the left paramesenteric gutter and the right paramesenteric gutter.

They are also sometimes, but incorrectly referred to as other paracolic gutters. Paracolic gutters are recesses between the abdominal wall and the colon.

These gutters are clinically important because they allow a passage for infectious fluids from different compartments of the abdomen.

The right paramesenteric gutter

This space is defined by:

The left paramesenteric gutter

This space communicates with the pelvic cavity and is defined by:

See also

References

External links

Anatomy of the peritoneum and mesentery
General
Abdominal
From
ventral mesentery
From
dorsal mesentery
Abdominal cavity
General
Pelvic
Uterus/ovaries
Recesses
Spaces
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