Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Straight sinus

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Drains to
  
confluence of sinuses

MeSH
  
A07.231.908.224

TA
  
A12.3.05.112

Latin
  
sinus rectus

Dorlands /Elsevier
  
s_12/12739157

Straight sinus

Source
  
inferior sagittal sinus, great cerebral vein

The straight sinus, also known as tentorial sinus or the sinus rectus, is an area within the skull beneath the brain that receives venous blood. The straight sinus receives blood from the superior cerebellar veins and inferior sagittal sinus and drains into the confluence of sinuses.

Contents

Structure

The straight sinus is situated within the dura mater, where the falx cerebri meets the midline of tentorium cerebelli. In cross-section it is triangular, contains a few transverse bands across its interior, and increases in size as it proceeds backward.

Function

It forms from the confluence of the inferior sagittal sinus and great cerebral vein.

The straight sinus is an unpaired area beneath the brain which allows blood to drain from the inferior center of the head outwards posteriorly. It receives blood from the inferior sagittal sinus, great cerebral vein, posterior cerebral veins, superior cerebellar veins and veins from the falx cerebri.

References

Straight sinus Wikipedia