Left triangular ligament of the liver
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The left triangular ligament is a peritoneal suspensory ligament of the liver. It is formed by fusion of the superior and inferior reflections of the coronary ligament.
It is shorter than the right triangular ligament and does not separate the left subphrenic space from the subhepatic space.
-<p>The<strong> left triangular ligament </strong>is a <a href="/articles/peritoneal-ligaments">peritoneal suspensory ligament </a>of the liver. It is formed by fusion of the superior and inferior reflections of the coronary ligament.</p><p>It is shorter than the <a href="/articles/right-triangular-ligament-of-the-liver">right triangular ligament</a> and does not separate the left subphrenic space from the subhepatic space.</p>- +<p>The<strong> left triangular ligament </strong>is a <a href="/articles/peritoneal-ligaments">peritoneal suspensory ligament </a>of the <a title="liver" href="/articles/liver">liver</a>. It is formed by fusion of the superior and inferior reflections of the coronary ligament.</p><p>It is shorter than the <a href="/articles/right-triangular-ligament-of-the-liver">right triangular ligament</a> and does not separate the left subphrenic space from the subhepatic space.</p>