“…A significant increase in interest in the morphology of coronary veins and their valves occurred in the 1980s after the development of new treatment modalities in invasive cardiology and cardiac surgery via cannulation of the coronary veins, particularly the coronary sinus. The presence of valves in the small cardiac veins and absence of the valves in the Thebesian veins was confirmed by a series of studies conducted in the 1980s by Lüdinghausen and coworkers, who studied these vessels with the combination of injections and histological techniques (von Lüdinghausen, , , ; von Lüdinghausen, Ohmachi, Besch & Mettenleiter, ), and the work of other authors (Tschabitscher, ; Rosinia & Low ; Melo et al, ; Cendrowska‐Pinkosz & Urbanowicz, ; Gerber et al, ; Kozlowski et al, ; Ortale, Gabriel, Iost & Marquez, ; Ho, Sanchez‐Quintana & Becker, ). All authors, however, devoted their studies to the morphology of the central region of the venous bed of the heart, thus its outermost parts (including the intramyocardial segments) were neglected.…”