Common hepatic artery
In anatomy, the common hepatic artery is a short blood vessel that supplies oxygenated blood to the liver, pylorus (a part of the stomach), duodenum (a part of the small intestine) and pancreas.
It arises from the celiac artery and has the following branches:
The celiac artery and its branches; the stomach has been raised and the peritoneum removed.
The portal vein and its tributaries.
Abdominal portion of the sympathetic trunk, with the celiac and hypogastric plexuses.
Horizontal disposition of the peritoneum in the upper part of the abdomen.
inferior pancreaticoduodenal · intestinal (jejunal, ileal, arcades, vasa recta) · ileocolic (colic, anterior cecal, posterior cecal, ileal branch, appendicular) · right colic · middle colic
left colic · sigmoid · superior rectal · marginal
uterine ♀ (helicine, vaginal of uterine, ovarian of uterine, tubal of uterine) · vaginal ♀ / inferior vesical ♂
internal pudendal: inferior rectal · perineal (urethral) · posterior scrotal ♂ / labial ♀ · bulb of penis ♂ / vestibule ♀ · deep artery of the penis ♂ (helicine) / clitoris ♀ · dorsal of the penis ♂ / clitoris ♀
iliolumbar (lumbar, iliac) · lateral sacral · superior gluteal
inferior epigastric (cremasteric, round ligament) · deep circumflex iliac · femoral