J Korean Surg Soc.
1998 Jun;54(Suppl):991-995.
Anatomical Variations of the Right Colic Artery
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Surgery, Masan Samsung Hospital, Sungkyunkwan University College of Medicine.
Abstract
- A through knowledge of the anatomy of colonic mesenteric arteries is necessary to accomplish successful,
uncomplicated abdominal operations, especially laparoscopic colonic resections in which the
mesenteric vessels can't be palpated. Such knowledge is also important when performing a colonic
resection for cancer using proximal vascular ligation and wide en bloc resection. Most surgical textbooks
depict a "normal pattern" of arterial supply to the right colon as consisting of three arterial branches
(the ileocolic, the right colic, and the middle colic arteries) arising independently from the superior
mesenteric artery (SMA). Based on the literature, there are only two colonic arteries arising independently
from the SMA in many cases.
We examined the anatomy of these arteries in 50 patients who had had SMA angiographies for various
diseases from January 1995 to May 1997. In all of our cases, the ileocolic artery and the middle colicartery
emanated directly from the SMA, but the right colic artery originated directly from the SMA
in only 54% of the cases. The right colic artery was absent in 8% of the cases. It also arose as a single
trunk with the middle colic artery (22% of the cases) and from the ileocolic artery (16% of the cases).
Our data, together with published anatomic studies, lead us to conclude that in many cases there are
only two independent branches arising from the SMA that supply the large intestine, the ileocolic artery and
the middle colic artery. This knowledge may be helpful in laparoscopic colon surgery, radical colon
resections for cancer, and colon replacements after operations on the esophagus or the urinary bladder.