1. [Vascularization of the trochanter fragment after digastric trochanterotomy in man].
- Author
-
Najima H, Gagey O, Huten D, and Cottias P
- Subjects
- Femur blood supply, Humans, Iliac Artery anatomy & histology, Femoral Artery anatomy & histology, Femur surgery, Osteotomy
- Abstract
We examined the human vascular anatomy to the greater trochanter after digastric trochanterotomy, using some injection techniques and practiced the trochanterotomy (digastric, classic). We found 3 major sources of blood supply to the greater trochanter: the proximal soft tissues, including the gluteus medius and minimus, were mainly vascularized from the internal iliac artery system, and the distal soft tissues, including the vastus lateralis, were vascularized from the branches of the lateral circumflex femoral artery (LCFA). A third possible source of blood circulation came from the LCFA, but this branch was only found in 12 to 15 samples. Many vascular structures from the LCFA were concentrated in the anterior half of the vastus lateralis muscle which were deeply imbedded and ran upward to the trochanteric insertion of the vastus lateralis muscle. The distance from the superior tip of the greater trochanter to the point at which the first branch of the descending branch of the LCFA enters into the vastus lateralis muscles was from 65 mm. to 125 mm. The descending branch was found consistently in all 20 samples. Our results proved that with digastric trochanterotomy, we can preserve all three sources of vascularization whereas with classic trochanterotomy the supply from the transverse and descending branches of the LCFA are lost.
- Published
- 1999