Left_colic_artery

Left colic artery

Left colic artery

Artery


The left colic artery is a branch of the inferior mesenteric artery distributed to the descending colon, and left part of the transverse colon. It ends by dividing into an ascending branch and a descending branch;[1] the terminal branches of the two branches go on to form anastomoses with the middle colic artery, and a sigmoid artery (respectively).[2]:1196

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Structure

The left colic artery usually represents the dominant arterial supply to the left colic flexure.[2]:1196

Course

The left colic artery passes to the left posterior to the peritoneum. After a short but variable course, it divides into an ascending branch and a descending branch.[1]

Branches and anastomoses

Ascending branch

The ascending branch passes superior-ward. It passes anterior to the (ipsilateral) psoas major muscle, gonadal vessels, ureter, and kidney; it passes posterior to the inferior mesenteric vein. Its terminal branches form anastomoses with those of the middle colic artery; it also forms anastomoses with the descending branch (of the left colic artery).[2]:1196

Descending branch

The descending branch passes inferolaterally.[2]:1196 It forms anastomoses with the superior-most sigmoid artery[1] as well as the ascending branch (of the left colic artery), thereby participating in the formation of the marginal artery of the colon.[2]:1196

Variation

The left colic artery may have a common origin with a sigmoid artery, or may arise by branching of from a sigmoid artery. Occasionally, the left colic artery may arise from either the superior mesenteric artery, the middle colic artery, or the proximal-most jejunal artery; rarely, an accessory left colic artery may arise from the aforementioned arteries. An accessory left colic artery may also arise from the left colic artery itself.[2]:1196

Clinical significance

The left colic artery may be ligated during abdominal surgery to remove colorectal cancer.[3] This may have poorer outcomes than preserving the artery.[3]

Additional images


References

  1. Gray, Henry (1918). Gray's Anatomy (20th ed.). p. 610.
  2. Gray's anatomy : the anatomical basis of clinical practice. Susan Standring (Forty-second ed.). [New York]. 2021. ISBN 978-0-7020-7707-4. OCLC 1201341621.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  3. Fan, Yu-Chen; Ning, Fei-Long; Zhang, Chun-Dong; Dai, Dong-Qiu (April 2018). "Preservation versus non-preservation of left colic artery in sigmoid and rectal cancer surgery: A meta-analysis". International Journal of Surgery (London, England). 52: 269–277. doi:10.1016/j.ijsu.2018.02.054. ISSN 1743-9159. PMID 29501795.



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