Left colic artery

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Left colic artery
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The inferior mesenteric artery and its branches. (Left colic visible at center right.)
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Sigmoid colon and rectum, showing distribution of branches of inferior mesenteric artery and their anastomoses. (Left colic visible at center left.)
Details
Source Inferior mesenteric
Vein Left colic vein
Supplies Descending colon
Identifiers
Latin arteria colica sinistra
TA98 A12.2.12.071
TA2 4292
FMA 14826
Anatomical terminology

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

Contents

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

Related Research Articles

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References

  1. 1 2 3 Gray, Henry (1918). Gray's Anatomy (20th ed.). p. 610.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 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. 1 2 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.