Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Medial palpebral arteries

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Source
  
ophthalmic artery

Dorlands /Elsevier
  
a_61/12155367

Supplies
  
eyelids

TA
  
A12.2.06.044

Medial palpebral arteries

Branches
  
superior palpebral arch inferior palpebral arch

Latin
  
arteriae palpebrales mediales

The medial palpebral arteries (internal palpebral arteries) are arteries of the head. They are two in number, superior and inferior, arise from the ophthalmic, opposite the pulley of the Obliquus superior.

Course

They leave the orbit to encircle the eyelids near their free margins, forming a superior and an inferior arch, which lie between the Orbicularis oculi and the tarsi.

The superior palpebral arch anastomoses, at the lateral angle of the orbit, with the zygomaticoörbital branch of the temporal artery and with the upper of the two lateral palpebral branches from the lacrimal artery.

The inferior palpebral arch anastomoses, at the lateral angle of the orbit, with the lower of the two lateral palpebral branches from the lacrimal and with the transverse facial artery, and, at the medial part of the lid, with a branch from the angular artery.

From this last anastomoses a branch passes to the nasolacrimal duct, ramifying in its mucous membrane, as far as the inferior meatus of the nasal cavity.

References

Medial palpebral arteries Wikipedia