The connective tissue of the adductor canal – a morphological study in fetal and adult specimens

The adductor canal is a conical or pyramid‐shaped pathway that contains the femoral vessels, saphenous nerve and a varying amount of fibrous tissue. It is involved in adductor canal syndrome, a claudication syndrome involving young individuals. Our objective was to study modifications induced by agi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of anatomy 2009-03, Vol.214 (3), p.388-395
Hauptverfasser: De Oliveira, Flavia, De Vasconcellos Fontes, Ricardo Bragança, Da Silva Baptista, Josemberg, Mayer, William Paganini, De Campos Boldrini, Silvia, Liberti, Edson Aparecido
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container_end_page 395
container_issue 3
container_start_page 388
container_title Journal of anatomy
container_volume 214
creator De Oliveira, Flavia
De Vasconcellos Fontes, Ricardo Bragança
Da Silva Baptista, Josemberg
Mayer, William Paganini
De Campos Boldrini, Silvia
Liberti, Edson Aparecido
description The adductor canal is a conical or pyramid‐shaped pathway that contains the femoral vessels, saphenous nerve and a varying amount of fibrous tissue. It is involved in adductor canal syndrome, a claudication syndrome involving young individuals. Our objective was to study modifications induced by aging on the connective tissue and to correlate them to the proposed pathophysiological mechanism. The bilateral adductor canals and femoral vessels of four adult and five fetal specimens were removed en bloc and analyzed. Sections 12 µm thick were obtained and the connective tissue studied with Sirius Red, Verhoeff, Weigert and Azo stains. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) photomicrographs of the surfaces of each adductor canal were also analyzed. Findings were homogeneous inside each group. The connective tissue of the canal was continuous with the outer layer of the vessels in both groups. The pattern of concentric, thick collagen type I bundles in fetal specimens was replaced by a diffuse network of compact collagen bundles with several transversal fibers and an impressive content of collagen III fibers. Elastic fibers in adults were not concentrated in the thick bundles but dispersed in line with the transversal fiber system. A dynamic compression mechanism with or without an evident constricting fibrous band has been proposed previously for adductor canal syndrome, possibly involving the connective tissue inside the canal. The vessels may not slide freely during movement. These age‐related modifications in normal individuals may represent necessary conditions for this syndrome to develop.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1469-7580.2009.01047.x
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It is involved in adductor canal syndrome, a claudication syndrome involving young individuals. Our objective was to study modifications induced by aging on the connective tissue and to correlate them to the proposed pathophysiological mechanism. The bilateral adductor canals and femoral vessels of four adult and five fetal specimens were removed en bloc and analyzed. Sections 12 µm thick were obtained and the connective tissue studied with Sirius Red, Verhoeff, Weigert and Azo stains. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) photomicrographs of the surfaces of each adductor canal were also analyzed. Findings were homogeneous inside each group. The connective tissue of the canal was continuous with the outer layer of the vessels in both groups. The pattern of concentric, thick collagen type I bundles in fetal specimens was replaced by a diffuse network of compact collagen bundles with several transversal fibers and an impressive content of collagen III fibers. Elastic fibers in adults were not concentrated in the thick bundles but dispersed in line with the transversal fiber system. A dynamic compression mechanism with or without an evident constricting fibrous band has been proposed previously for adductor canal syndrome, possibly involving the connective tissue inside the canal. The vessels may not slide freely during movement. 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Elastic fibers in adults were not concentrated in the thick bundles but dispersed in line with the transversal fiber system. A dynamic compression mechanism with or without an evident constricting fibrous band has been proposed previously for adductor canal syndrome, possibly involving the connective tissue inside the canal. The vessels may not slide freely during movement. These age‐related modifications in normal individuals may represent necessary conditions for this syndrome to develop.</abstract><cop>Oxford, UK</cop><pub>Blackwell Publishing Ltd</pub><pmid>19245505</pmid><doi>10.1111/j.1469-7580.2009.01047.x</doi><tpages>8</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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source MEDLINE; Wiley Journals; IngentaConnect Free/Open Access Journals; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Wiley Online Library (Open Access Collection); PubMed Central; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Adult
anatomy
Collagen - ultrastructure
Connective Tissue - embryology
Connective Tissue - ultrastructure
Elastic Tissue - embryology
Elastic Tissue - ultrastructure
electron
extremity
Female
Femoral Artery - embryology
Femoral Artery - ultrastructure
Femoral Vein - embryology
Femoral Vein - ultrastructure
Fetus - ultrastructure
Humans
intermittent claudication
Male
microscopy
Microscopy, Electron
Microscopy, Electron, Scanning
Microscopy, Polarization
Middle Aged
Original
polarization
regional
scanning
Thigh - anatomy & histology
Thigh - blood supply
Thigh - embryology
Young Adult
title The connective tissue of the adductor canal – a morphological study in fetal and adult specimens
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