Surgical microanatomy of the occipital artery for suboccipital muscle dissection and intracranial artery reconstruction

The occipital artery (OA) is an important donor artery for posterior fossa revascularization. Harvesting the OA is difficult in comparison to the superficial temporal artery because the OA runs between suboccipital muscles. Anatomical knowledge of the suboccipital muscles and OA is essential for har...

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Veröffentlicht in:Surgical neurology international 2019-06, Vol.10, p.127, Article 127
Hauptverfasser: Hatano, Yuto, Ota, Nakao, Noda, Kosumo, Okada, Yasuaki, Suzuki, Yosuke, Fukuyama, Shusei, Tanada, Shuichi, Hashimoto, Atsumu, Kondo, Tomomasa, Miyazaki, Takanori, Kinoshita, Yu, Kamiyama, Hiroyasu, Tokuda, Sadahisa, Tanikawa, Rokuya
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The occipital artery (OA) is an important donor artery for posterior fossa revascularization. Harvesting the OA is difficult in comparison to the superficial temporal artery because the OA runs between suboccipital muscles. Anatomical knowledge of the suboccipital muscles and OA is essential for harvesting the OA during elevation of the splenius capitis muscle (SPL) for reconstruction of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery. We analyzed the running pattern of the OA and its anatomic variations using preoperative and intraoperative findings. From April 2012 to March 2018, we surgically treated 162 patients with suboccipital muscle dissection by OA dissection using the lateral suboccipital approach. The running pattern and relationship between the suboccipital muscles and OA were retrospectively analyzed using the operation video and preoperative enhanced computed tomography (CT) images. The anatomic variation in the running pattern of the OA was classified into two types: lateral type, running lateral to the muscle and medial type, running medial to the longissimus capitis muscle (LNG). The medial pattern was observed in 107 (66%) patients and the lateral pattern in 54 (33.3%); 1 (0.6%) patient had the OA running between the LNGs. Preoperative CT is effective in determining the running course of the OA, which is important for safely harvesting the OA during SPL elevation. There is a risk of causing OA injury in patients with the lateral pattern. This is the first report showing that the OA rarely runs in between the LNGs.
ISSN:2229-5097
2152-7806
2152-7806
DOI:10.25259/SNI-16-2019