Surgical Anatomy Of The Pancreas.ppt Link
A single sentence in bold: Behind the neck, two rivers cross: the portal confluence. Elara recalled the cold sweat of passing a blunt instrument behind the pancreatic neck. One millimeter too deep, and you tear the superior mesenteric vein. The slide showed a cadaveric dissection—the portal vein shining blue-black, the pancreas lifted like a bridge.
Not a hero. A ghost. The pancreas, the text whispered, lies retroperitoneally—behind the stomach, draped over the spine, clinging to the duodenum like a secret. “You will not see it until you know where to feel,” the notes read in the margins. Elara remembered her first Whipple procedure. The pancreas had felt like a firm, pale tongue of resistance in a dark cavity. SURGICAL ANATOMY OF THE PANCREAS.ppt
The map had been drawn. Now came the walking. A single sentence in bold: Behind the neck,
But thanks to that old .ppt file, she would know exactly where to place her first clamp. The slide showed a cadaveric dissection—the portal vein
A tiny, pale white line—the main pancreatic duct. It can be 1mm or 3mm. It can be absent, split, or looping. Never assume. Always probe. Elara smiled grimly. She had once spent forty minutes searching for a duct in a fatty pancreas, only to find it running dorsally, laughing at her.
The Map Behind the Curtain
The image showed the C-loop of the duodenum cupping the pancreatic head. The common bile duct pierced through it like a needle through felt. Here lies the danger, the slide warned. Dissect too medially, and you breach the bile duct. Dissect too laterally, and you strip the mesopancreas—the uncinate process—where the SMV hides like a vein in a trap.