At the point where the vein enters the liver the thickened margin of the ventral mesogastrium is continued, as ligamentum hepato-duodenale, to the upper part of the duodenum and forms the ventral boundary of the foramen of Winslow. Between the layers of the mesogastrium which meet in this margin are situated the portal vein, biliary duct and hepatic artery, together with the nerves and lymphatics of the liver.
The mesogastrium originally divided the abdominal cavity between umbilicus and diaphragm into symmetrical right and left halves of equal size and extent. This early symmetrical arrangement becomes disturbed about the seventh week by the rotation of the stomach and the resulting altered course of the mesogastrium, which render the two original equal halves of the abdominal cavity unequal and asymmetrical. The original right half becomes placed behind the stomach and is converted into a blind sac with its opening directed to the right.
The communication of the general abdominal cavity with the retrogastric space by means of this channel is still wide in the embryo, but gradually becomes narrowed in the course of further development to form the foramen of Winslow. This opening is situated between the hepato-duodenal ligament and the parietal peritoneum covering the vena cava. It is constricted from below by the curve of the hepatic artery as this vessel passes from the cœliac axis to reach the liver at the transverse fissure between the layers of the lesser omentum.
The earlier developmental stages of the higher mammalian embryos are in general well illustrated by the permanent adult conditions found in some of the lower vertebrates, in which development does not proceed beyond the primitive condition.
In reptiles, birds and mammals the epiploic bursa is generally formed, while in amphibia the dorsal mesogastrium is very short and connects the stomach directly to the dorsal midline of the abdominal cavity without forming the sac-like extension of the great omentum.
The dorsal mesogastrium with the stomach, and the ventral mesogastrium including the liver between its layers, divides in these animals the cephalic part of the body cavity into two halves, corresponding to the earlier embryonic stages in man and in the higher mammalia.
The foramen of Winslow of the higher forms appears in the lower vertebrates as the wide-open space leading from below into the right half of the cœlom cavity. The dorsal mesogastrium remains short, not forming the pouch-like extension of the great omentum. The stomach retains more or less its primitive vertical position without rotation or elevation of the pyloric extremity, and the intestinal canal is simple, short and comparatively straight.