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1.
Cureus ; 15(12): e51146, 2023 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38283514

RESUMO

Background The diameter of coronary arteries serves as a potential predictor of coronary artery diseases (CADs) that can lead to sudden death. Factors such as gender, age, and coronary artery dominance play a role in influencing the size of normal coronary arteries. The outcome of coronary interventions, to a certain extent, depends on luminal size. Given the considerable variability in luminal size within the normal population, establishing the baseline size of normal coronary arteries in a specific population can aid in estimating the severity of coronary disease and predicting the outcome of interventional procedures. The current study focuses on estimating the luminal diameter of normal coronary arteries within the context of age, gender, and cardiac dominance in the South Indian population. Methods A retrospective study was conducted utilizing coronary angiograms with normal findings from 453 patients, comprising 257 males and 196 females, with a mean age of 54.66±10.66 years. These patients attended the outpatient service of the Cardiology Department at Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences, Kochi, a quaternary care center, between 2015 and 2017. The luminal diameter of coronary arteries is represented as mean±SD in millimeters. Results In the present study, we noted that the largest coronary artery was the left main coronary artery (LMCA, 3.59±0.58 mm), followed by the left anterior descending artery (LAD, 3.50±0.52 mm), the left circumflex artery (LCX, 3.31±0.57 mm), and the right coronary artery (RCA, 3.18±0.57 mm). We further broke down the statistics to evolve a gender pattern. In the raw comparison of data, the luminal size of coronary arteries in males was greater than in females, and statistical significance was noted in all except LAD. In males, the largest coronary artery was LMCA (3.70±0.60 mm), followed by LAD (3.54±0.48 mm), LCX (3.36±0.58 mm), and RCA (3.25±0.62 mm). In females, no significant size difference was observed between LMCA (3.45±0.53 mm) and LAD (3.46±0.55 mm). Females exhibited an increase in the size of LMCA with advancing age. Regardless of right or left cardiac dominance, LMCA was consistently larger than RCA in both genders. However, in cases of co-dominance, only males demonstrated significantly larger LMCA. Conclusion Precise knowledge of the size of normal coronary arteries and their influence by gender, age, and dominance can be crucial for the comprehensive evaluation of CADs and the success of interventional procedures.

2.
Int. j. morphol ; 39(6): 1596-1599, dic. 2021. ilus
Artigo em Inglês | LILACS | ID: biblio-1385559

RESUMO

SUMMARY: Accessory muscles of the neck are rare and are of clinical significance when present. During routine dissection of head and neck, two accessory muscles were found in the neck region of two cadavers, both male, one on the right and the other on the left. Both muscles took origin from the superior margin of the scapula and the insertion of the first muscle was to the clavicle, merging with subclavius and the second muscle got inserted to the first rib near the costochondral junction. This paper highlights the clinical significance and embryological aspects of such accessory muscles in the neck region.


RESUMEN: Los músculos accesorios del cuello son infrecuentes y tienen importancia clínica cuando están presentes. Durante la disección de rutina de la cabeza y el cuello, se encontraron dos músculos accesorios en la región del cuello de dos cadáveres, ambos de sexo masculino, uno a la derecha y otro a la izquierda. Ambos músculos se originaban en el margen superior de la escápula y la inserción del primer músculo se extendía a la clavícula, fusionándose con el músculo subclavio. El segundo músculo se insertó en la primera costilla cerca de la unión costocondral. Este artículo destaca la importancia clínica y los aspectos embriológicos de dichos músculos accesorios en la región del cuello.


Assuntos
Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Idoso , Clavícula , Músculo Esquelético/anatomia & histologia , Pescoço , Cadáver , Variação Anatômica
3.
Cureus ; 13(2): e13115, 2021 Feb 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33728134

RESUMO

Introduction Despite adequate preparation and meticulous pre-operative assessment, variations of the vascular anatomy of the aortic arch may lead to clinical dilemmas. In the present era, with the easy availability of imaging facilities, various anatomical variations can be found out prior to an interventional procedure. However, there are many countries including India where such facilities may still be not widely available. The purpose of this study was to assess the prevalence of these anatomical variants in patients undergoing Computerised Tomography (CT) chest with contrast. Methods This observational study involved patients who underwent CT chest with contrast as part of various clinical indications during a three-year period in a tertiary care centre in South India. Variations of the aortic arch and its branching pattern were studied in 4,000 chest CT images of patients referred to the radiology department.  Results A total of 4,000 patients underwent CT chest with contrast during the study period. Twenty-seven variations were observed in these patients. They included aberrant right subclavian artery in seven patients, bovine arch in one patient, bovine origin of left vertebral artery from arch in one patient, bronchial artery of anomalous origin from arch in one patient, double aortic arch in one patient, and right-sided aortic arch in 16 patients.  Conclusion The variant anatomy of the aortic arch has tremendous clinical significance, especially from the surgical standpoint. Anatomical variants can also cause difficulty during catheterization while performing endovascular interventions. Given the prevalence demonstrated in our study, imaging may be indicated prior to any procedure involving vascular access in order to prevent unwanted complications.

4.
J Clin Diagn Res ; 9(11): AD01-2, 2015 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26673689

RESUMO

An aberrant right subclavian artery arising as the last vessel of the arch of aorta is an uncommon anatomic anomaly with prevalence reported between 0.2% and 2.0%. In 80% of the cases the aberrant right subclavian artery takes a retro-oesophageal course to the right upper limb. During routine dissection of cadavers for teaching undergraduate medical students an anomalous retrotracheal right subclavian artery which is a very rare vascular anomaly was encountered in a 35-year-old male cadaver. The artery arose as the last branch of the arch of aorta and coursed to the right between the trachea and oesophagus. The presence of this vascular anomaly could be an unusual cause of dysphagia and breathing difficulty. The clinical significance and embryological aspects of this vascular variant is discussed in this paper.

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