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MDCT angiography of anatomical variations of the celiac trunk and superior mesenteric artery
Author(s) -
Neda Ognjanović,
Dejan Jeremić,
Ivana Živanović-Mačužić,
Маја Sazdanovic,
Predrag Sazdanović,
Irena Tanasković,
Jovan Jovanović,
R Cerovic Popovic,
Radiša Vojinović,
Bojan Milošević,
Miloš Milosavljević,
Dobrivoje Stojadinović,
Jovo Toševski,
Maja Vulović
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
archives of biological sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.217
H-Index - 25
eISSN - 1821-4339
pISSN - 0354-4664
DOI - 10.2298/abs1401233o
Subject(s) - medicine , superior mesenteric artery , celiac artery , trunk , left gastric artery , radiology , angiography , inferior mesenteric artery , splenic artery , anastomosis , common hepatic artery , artery , anatomy , surgery , ecology , biology
The aim of this study was to detect and describe the existence and incidence of anatomical variations of the celiac trunk and superior mesenteric artery. The study was conducted on 150 persons, who underwent abdominal Multi- Detector Computer Tomography (MDCT) angiography, from April 2010 until November 2012. CT images were obtained with a 64-row MDCT scanner in order to analyze the vascular anatomy and anatomical variations of the celiac trunk and superior mesenteric artery. In our study, we found that 78% of patients have a classic anatomy of the celiac trunk and superior mesenteric artery. The most frequent variation was the origin of the common hepatic artery from the superior mesenteric artery (10%). The next variation, according to frequency, was the origin of the left gastric artery direct from the abdominal aorta (4%). The arc of Buhler as an anastomosis between the celiac trunk and superior mesenteric artery, was detected in 3% of cases, as was the presence of a common trunk of the celiac trunk and superior mesenteric artery (in 3% of cases). Separate origin of the splenic artery and the common hepatic artery was present in 2% of patients. The MDCT scanner gives us an insight into normal anatomy and variations of the abdominal blood vessels, which is very important in the planning of surgical interventions, especially transplantation, as well as in the prevention of complications due to ischemia

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