Obturator artery
The obturator artery ("hip-hole artery ") is an artery of the lower extremity. It arises from the internal iliac artery and runs through the obturator foramen or the obturator canal - together with the vein of the same name and the obturator nerve - to the inside of the thigh . It then divides behind the pectineus muscle into an anterior and posterior branch ( ramus anterior and posterior, respectively ). They supply the adductors of the thigh and, via the ligamentum capitis femoris, also the hip joint head of the thigh bone ( arteria capitis femoris ). The ramus anterior anastomoses with the arteria circumflexa femoris medialis , the ramus posterior with the arteria glutaea inferior .
Clinically, the obturator artery is of particular importance because of its proximity to the acetabulum . Especially in the use of hip endoprostheses they can be easily injured and lead to stronger bleeding.
literature
- Johannes W. Rohen : Topographical Anatomy. Textbook with a special focus on clinical aspects and imaging procedures. 10th, completely redesigned edition. Schattauer, Stuttgart et al. 2008, ISBN 978-3-7945-2616-1 , p. 156.
Individual evidence
- ↑ D. Kohn, A. Weiß: Vascular injuries during acetabular cup implantation and acetabular cup replacement - case report, literature review and anatomical study. In: Journal for orthopedics and their border areas. Vol. 131, No. 2, 1993, pp. 139-142, doi : 10.1055 / s-2008-1040218 .