Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 16, 2026

Intercavernous sinuses

The intercavernous sinuses are two in number, an anterior and a posterior, and connect the two cavernous sinuses across the middle line.

Last revised
Jun 16, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
124 w
Citations
1
Source
Intercavernous sinuses
Dural veins
The sinuses at the base of the skull. (Visible as light blue circle at center.)
Details
Identifiers
Latinsini intercavernosi
TA98A12.3.05.117
TA24862
FMA50773
Anatomical terminology

The intercavernous sinuses are two in number, an anterior and a posterior, and connect the two cavernous sinuses1 across the middle line.

Intercavernous sinuses source ↗

The anterior passes in front of the hypophysis cerebri (pituitary gland), the posterior behind it, and they form with the cavernous sinuses a venous circle (circular sinus) around the hypophysis.

The anterior one is usually the larger of the two, and one or other is occasionally absent.

References

References

This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 659 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

See also

See also