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THE DISTRIBUTION AND ANASTOMOSES OF ARTERIES SUPPLYING THE HEAD AND NECK OF THE FEMUR



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Abstract

1. At necropsy the arterial distribution within the head and neck of the femur was investigated by arteriographic injection in fifty-seven uninjured hips of mostly elderly subjects.

2. Before injection all vessels to the head except for one or more particular groups were divided.

3. The superior retinacular arteries were found to be the most important arterial supply to the head. Through the widely distributed branches of their lateral epiphysial vessels (superior capital) they supplied the superior, medial, central and usually the lateral parts of the head: through anastomoses they could also supply the anterior and posterior segments, the subfovea and the inferior sector, which receive separate contributions. Sometimes the inferior or the lateral connections were defective.

4. The arteries in the ligamentum teres were either absent or unimportant for the head in most subjects. Either the vessels in the ligament never reached the head or they supplied only a limited subfoveal zone. In only one out of sixteen specimens was the whole head injected through the vessels of the ligamentum teres.

5. The inferior retinacular arteries were found to be of subsidiary importance and generally supplied a variable infero-lateral part of the head, particularly posteriorly. In a small number there was an anastomotic supply to other parts of the head, but only in two out of sixteen specimens was nearly all the head injected through these vessels.

6. The regular anastomotic supply from the superior retinacular arteries to the subfovea and to the inferior part of the head was in curious contrast to the infrequent anastomotic filling of the lateral epiphysial arteries from the inferior retinacular or ligamentum teres arteries.

7. Vessels within the femoral neck sometimes supplied the lateral part of the head but never the medial three-quarters.

8. The neck of the femur received important branches from the superior retinacular arteries but only in a small number (15 per cent) was part of it entirely dependent on this supply.

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