Variations and topography of the arteries in the lesser omentum in humans
โ Scribed by Andreas H. Weiglein
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 806 KB
- Volume
- 9
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0897-3806
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Modern surgical techniques depend in part on knowledge of both the "normal" and the anomalous arterial blood supply. For instance, in liver transplantation, during surgery of the gallbladder. gastrectomy, and gastric lymphadenectomy, or when selective arterial chemotherapy is used for treatment of liver cancer, aberrant hepatic arteries can be a significant problem. A series of 138 cadavers with arterial latex injection were dissected and 10 corrosion casts were made LO obtain an exact knowledge of the topography of the normal and anomalous arteries of the lesser omentum in humans. The so-called normal anatomy wa. found in only 9% ( 15 of 148 individuals), the remaining five-sixths presenting some variations from this, many of direct surgical importance. In these cases one or two aberrant hepatic arteries (37%). an artery in the free border of thc hepatoduodenal ligament (19%), a right hepatic artery crossing the portal vein posteriorly (4%). the right hepatic artery entering the triangle of Calot anteriorly (29%) or not (7%), or an accessory left gastric artery branching off the left hepatic artery (2%) were found. o 1 9 6 Wiley-l-iss. Inc.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The variation in the origin of the (posterior) intercostal arteries was examined in 79 aortae of children who ranged in age from 1 day to 15 years and died of various causes. The distribution, size and number of the origins of the (usually present: 9) pairs of these arteries varied wide
Anatomical literature contains numerous descriptions of the more striking aortic anomalies. I n most instances, these have been reports upon individual cases, and have not presented the lesser variations which are regularly encountered in every dissection laboratory. It is the object of the present