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Tendon of Todaro

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Tendon of Todaro
Details
Synonymstendon of inferior pyramidal space, tendon of valve of inferior vena cava
Identifiers
Latintendo spatii pyramidalis inferioris (TA2)
tendo valvulae venae cavae inferioris (TA98)
TA23981
Anatomical terminology
Dissection in right anterior oblique view of the right atrium. TT: tendon of Todaro; ER: Eustachian valve, CSO: coronary sinus

The tendon of Todaro is part of the fibrous skeleton of the heart, located in the right atrium. It was described[citation needed] by Italian anatomist Francesco Todaro. It is a continuation of the Eustachian valve of the inferior vena cava and the Thebesian valve of the coronary sinus.

It delimits the antero-superior boundary of the triangle of Koch. The apex of Koch's triangle is the location of the atrioventricular node.[1]

The tendon is near-impossible to locate in a living heart, so clinicians use other features to determine the boundaries of the Koch's triangle.[2] Some cardiologists even go as far as rejecting the usefulness of the tendom as an anatomical landmark altogether.[3]

References

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  1. ^ McGuire, Mark A.; Johnson, David C.; Robotin, Monica; Richards, David A.; Uther, John B.; Ross, David L. (1992-09-15). "Dimensions of the triangle of Koch in humans". The American Journal of Cardiology. 70 (7): 829–830. doi:10.1016/0002-9149(92)90574-I. ISSN 0002-9149. PMID 1519544.
  2. ^ Yen Ho & Anderson 2000.
  3. ^ James 1999.

Sources

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