Korean J Phys Anthropol.  2000 Mar;13(1):21-30.

A Case of Superficial Brachial Artery

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Anatomy and Institute of Basic Medical Science, Yonsei University Wonju College of Medicine, Wonju, Korea.

Abstract

We observed a case of superficial brachial artery in the left arm of a Korean male cadaver. It was compared with the previously reported ones, and its characteristics were summarized as follows. 1. The superficial brachial artery, which arose from the axillary artery at the superior border of the teres major muscle, passed in front of the medial root of the median nerve and subsequently became to lie on the medial side of the median nerve. This artery crossed the median nerve anteriorly in the middle of the upper arm, then lay lateral to the median nerve in the lower part of the upper arm to the cubital fossa. 2. After giving off the deep brachial artery, several muscular branches and inferior ulnar collateral artery, the superficial brachial artery terminated in the cubital fossa by dividing into its two terminal branches, the radial and ulnar arteries. The superior ulnar collateral artery arose from the deep brachial artery, and the common interosseous artery from the ulnar artery. The course and distribution of the ulnar and radial arteries were normal. 3. It has been reported that a deeper artery, which takes the normal course of the brachial artery and continues as the common interosseous artery, usually coexists with the superficial brachial artery, even if the superficial brachial artery gives off both radial and ulnar arteries in the cubital fossa. But in our case, there was no deeper artery which passes deep to the median nerve. 4. It was presumed that this type of variation is produced by an unusual development of the superficial brachial artery that has been formed during early development as the main artery at the cost of complete degeneration of the normal brachial artery.

Keyword

Brachial artery; Superficial brachial artery; Median nerve

MeSH Terms

Arm
Arteries
Axillary Artery
Brachial Artery*
Cadaver
Humans
Male
Median Nerve
Radial Artery
Ulnar Artery
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