Cruciate anastomosis

Summary

The cruciate anastomosis is a circulatory anastomosis in the upper thigh[1] formed by the inferior gluteal artery, the lateral and medial circumflex femoral arteries, the first perforating artery of the deep femoral artery,[2][1] and the anastomotic branch of the posterior branch of the obturator artery.[1]

Cruciate anastomosis
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Anatomical terminology
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The cruciate anastomosis is clinically relevant because if there is a blockage between the femoral artery and external iliac artery, blood can reach the popliteal artery by means of the anastomosis. The route of blood is through the internal iliac, to the inferior gluteal artery, to a perforating branch of the deep femoral artery, to the lateral circumflex femoral artery, then to its descending branch into the superior lateral genicular artery and thus into the popliteal artery.[citation needed]

Structure edit

The cruciate anastomosis is so-called because it resembles a cross.

Its four components are:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Henri Rouviere 11Ed
  2. ^ Moore, Keith L.; Dalley, Arthur F.; Agur, Anne M. R. (2018). Clinically Oriented Anatomy (8th ed.). Wolters Kluwer. ISBN 978-1-4963-4721-3.

  This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 620 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)