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Medial circumflex femoral artery

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Medial circumflex femoral artery
The profunda femoris artery, femoral artery and their major branches - right thigh, anterior view. Circumflex femoral arteries labeled.
Details
Sourcedeep femoral artery, femoral artery
Suppliesthigh
Identifiers
Latinarteria circumflexa femoris medialis
TA98A12.2.16.021
TA24686
FMA20799
Anatomical terminology

The medial circumflex femoral artery (internal circumflex artery, medial femoral circumflex artery) is an artery in the upper thigh that helps supply blood to the neck of the femur. Damage to the artery following a femoral neck fracture may lead to avascular (ischemic) necrosis of the femoral neck/head.[1]

Structure

The medial femoral circumflex artery arises from the medial and posterior aspect of the profunda femoris artery, and winds around the medial side of the femur, passing first between the pectineus and iliopsoas muscles, and then between the obturator externus and the adductor brevis muscles.

The medial femoral circumflex artery may occasionally arise directly from the femoral artery.

Branches

At the upper border of the adductor brevis it gives off two branches:

See also

References

  1. ^ Attention: This template ({{cite pmid}}) is deprecated. To cite the publication identified by PMID 3715086, please use {{cite journal}} with |pmid=3715086 instead.

External links

Public domain This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 630 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)