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About Recent Edits Go ad-free. Edit article. View revision history Report problem with Article. Citation, DOI and article data. Jones, J. Reference article, Radiopaedia. Hepatobiliary , Gastrointestinal. URL of Article. Some of them require your consent. Click on a category of cookies to activate or deactivate it.
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The website cannot function properly without these cookies, which is why they are not subject to your consent. These are cookies intended to measure the audience: it allows to generate usage statistics useful for the improvement of the website. Verify now. Toggle navigation. Institutional subscriptions support Language. Keep me signed in. Forgot your password? Sign in with Facebook. We'll pick it up to see its free lower border. Here's part of its attachment to the greater curve of the stomach.
Between its peritoneal layers there's a variable amount of fat. On the front, the greater omentum hangs free, in front of the coils of small intestine. On the back, it's attached to the front of the transverse colon. The part of the greater omentum between the stomach and the transverse colon is called the gastro-colic ligament.
If we divide it, which we've done here, we come again into the lesser sac, this time below the stomach. We're looking at some puzzling structures! To understand why they're arranged as they are, it'll be helpful to see how they developed.
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