1. Anatomical study of the vascular territories of the maxilla: role of the facial artery in allotransplantation
- Author
-
Jean-Paul Meningaud and Gaoussou Touré
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Facial artery ,Anastomosis ,Facial Bones ,stomatognathic system ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Maxilla ,Humans ,Vascularized Composite Allotransplantation ,Mucous Membrane ,Ascending palatine artery ,business.industry ,Arteriovenous Anastomosis ,Superior labial artery ,Maxillary artery ,Anatomy ,Arteries ,Surgery ,stomatognathic diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Face ,business ,Facial composite ,Artery - Abstract
Summary Background Facial composite tissue allotransplantation has recently become a surgical option. The maxilla, which forms the upper jaw and plays an important role in facial allotransplantation, consists of the maxillary and facial arteries. The maxillary artery is located deep within the tissue and considered the main artery of the maxilla; however, the facial artery is easy to access. The objective of this study was to examine the territories of the maxillary and facial arteries within the maxilla. Materials and methods We excised and examined 22 maxillae. Of these, 18 were injected with latex and four with India ink. Results We observed that the ascending palatine artery, which was collateral with the facial artery, vascularized the maxilla through its dorsal part. The facial artery vascularized the maxilla through its ventral part with the philtral and columellar branches of the superior labial artery. Therefore, the facial artery formed, through the nasal and palatine mucosa, an arterial circle with a dorsal and ventral pole. Angiosomes formed by both the facial and maxillary arteries were also observed. The India ink injected into the facial and maxillary arteries delineated specific territories for each artery. Discussion This study allowed us to determine the anatomical structures that provide vascularization to the maxilla and describe their different forms. The whole of the maxilla was vascularized by the facial artery, despite the caution imposed by several studies on the removal of the facial artery alone. Indeed, the removal technique was found to be safer when it preserved the anastomoses between the facial and maxillary arteries. Therefore, previous clinical experience and our anatomical study definitively demonstrate that the facial artery vascularizes the maxilla.
- Published
- 2013