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Published in: CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology 2/2009

01-03-2009 | Clinical Investigation

Anatomical Variations of the Popliteal Artery and its Tibial Branches: Analysis in 1242 Extremities

Authors: Sung-Won Kil, Gyoo-Sik Jung

Published in: CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | Issue 2/2009

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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to analyze the variations in branching of the popliteal artery by reviewing femoral arteriograms. Between 2004 and 2006, digital subtraction angiographies of both lower extremities were performed in 621 patients. We reviewed these 1242 arteriograms retrospectively in order to analyze the branching pattern of the popliteal artery. Of the 1242 extremities, 1108 extremities (89.2%) had normal branching pattern of the popliteal artery. The remaining 134 extremities (10.8%; 65 right, 69 left) in 105 patients (66 men, 39 women; 76 unilateral, 29 bilateral) showed seven variant branching patterns: hypoplastic or aplastic posterior tibial artery (PT) (n = 63, 5.1%); hypoplastic or aplastic anterior tibial artery (AT) (n = 21, 1.7%); trifurcation (n = 19, 1.5%); high origin of AT (n = 15, 1.2%); hypoplastic or aplastic PT and AT (n = 10, 0.8%); high origin of PT (n = 5, 0.4%); and anterior tibioperoneal trunk (n = 1, 0.1%). When the branching pattern of the popliteal artery is normal in one extremity, there is a 13% probability the other side will be a variant pattern. When the branching pattern is variant in one extremity, there is a 28% probability the opposite side will also contain a variation. Variations in branching of the popliteal artery are not uncommon. Awareness of these variations is important for evaluation of the lower extremity arteriograms and has clinical implications for vascular surgeons and interventional radiologists.
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Metadata
Title
Anatomical Variations of the Popliteal Artery and its Tibial Branches: Analysis in 1242 Extremities
Authors
Sung-Won Kil
Gyoo-Sik Jung
Publication date
01-03-2009
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology / Issue 2/2009
Print ISSN: 0174-1551
Electronic ISSN: 1432-086X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00270-008-9460-z

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