THE ARTERY BLOOD SUPPLY VARIANT OF THE UPPER LIMB

Authors

  • Ivan Maslarski

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15386/cjmed-549

Keywords:

brachial artery, superficial brachial artery, superficial palm arch, median artery

Abstract

Variations of arterial patterns in the upper limb have represented the most common subject of vascular anatomy. Different types of artery branching pattern of the upper limb are very important for orthopedists in angiographic and microvascular surgical practice.

The brachial artery (BA) is the most important vessel in the normal vascular anatomy of the upper limb. The classical pattern of the palmar hand region distribution shows the superficial palmar arch. Normally this arch is formed by the superficial branch of the ulnar artery and completed on the lateral side by one of these arteries: the superficial palmar branch of the radial artery, the princeps pollicis artery, the superficial palmar branch of the radial artery or the median artery.

After the routine dissection of the right upper limb of an adult male cadaver, we found a very rare variant of the superficial arch artery – a division in a higher level brachial artery. We found this division at 10.4 cm from the beginning of the brachial artery. This superficial brachial artery became a radial artery and was not involved in the formation of the palm arch. In the forearm region, the artery variant was present with the median artery and the ulnar artery, which form the superficial palm arch.

Author Biography

Ivan Maslarski, Medical Faculty at the University of Sofia

Department of Anatomy, histology and pathology

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Published

2015-09-20

How to Cite

1.
Maslarski I. THE ARTERY BLOOD SUPPLY VARIANT OF THE UPPER LIMB. Med Pharm Rep [Internet]. 2015 Sep. 20 [cited 2025 Oct. 3];88(4):545-9. Available from: https://medpharmareports.com/index.php/mpr/article/view/549

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Section

Case Report