open access

Vol 74, No 1 (2015)
Original article
Submitted: 2014-05-13
Accepted: 2014-07-01
Published online: 2015-03-02
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Quantification of the distal radial artery for improved vascular access

E. Wessel, K. Hessel, A. Glaros, A. Olinger
DOI: 10.5603/FM.2015.0016
·
Pubmed: 25792403
·
Folia Morphol 2015;74(1):100-105.

open access

Vol 74, No 1 (2015)
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Submitted: 2014-05-13
Accepted: 2014-07-01
Published online: 2015-03-02

Abstract

Background: There is no consensus in the literature as to which point of the radial artery (RA) is the safest to attempt vascular access. The purpose of this study was to measure the diameter, tortuosity and branching patterns of the distal RA.

Materials and methods: 140 cadaveric RAs (66 male, 74 female) were dissected and measured. The external diameter of the RA was measured at 2 cm increments starting at the radial styloid process (SP), moving proximally. The location and degree of 2-dimensional arterial tortuosity were recorded if > 35 degrees. Branches of the RA were recorded with respect to their distance from the SP.

Results: We observed that the right RA significantly increased in diameter at distances beyond 4 cm proximal from the radial SP, regardless of the sex of the individual. This increase in size was not noted on the left RA’s. Muscular artery branches of the distal RA were noted on average 1.82 cm proximal from the SP. Clinically significant tortuosity was present on average 3.47 cm proximal from the radial SP. The left RA did not significantly change in size along its course, but its statistically similar diameter when compared to the right RA allows us to make a recommendation this is applicable bilaterally.

Conclusions: Our data suggests that regardless of gender, vascular access of the RA could be safely performed at distances greater than 4 cm from the SP to yield a vessel with a larger diameter, less tortuosity, and fewer branches.

Abstract

Background: There is no consensus in the literature as to which point of the radial artery (RA) is the safest to attempt vascular access. The purpose of this study was to measure the diameter, tortuosity and branching patterns of the distal RA.

Materials and methods: 140 cadaveric RAs (66 male, 74 female) were dissected and measured. The external diameter of the RA was measured at 2 cm increments starting at the radial styloid process (SP), moving proximally. The location and degree of 2-dimensional arterial tortuosity were recorded if > 35 degrees. Branches of the RA were recorded with respect to their distance from the SP.

Results: We observed that the right RA significantly increased in diameter at distances beyond 4 cm proximal from the radial SP, regardless of the sex of the individual. This increase in size was not noted on the left RA’s. Muscular artery branches of the distal RA were noted on average 1.82 cm proximal from the SP. Clinically significant tortuosity was present on average 3.47 cm proximal from the radial SP. The left RA did not significantly change in size along its course, but its statistically similar diameter when compared to the right RA allows us to make a recommendation this is applicable bilaterally.

Conclusions: Our data suggests that regardless of gender, vascular access of the RA could be safely performed at distances greater than 4 cm from the SP to yield a vessel with a larger diameter, less tortuosity, and fewer branches.

Get Citation

Keywords

percutaneous coronary intervention, catheterisation, transradial

About this article
Title

Quantification of the distal radial artery for improved vascular access

Journal

Folia Morphologica

Issue

Vol 74, No 1 (2015)

Article type

Original article

Pages

100-105

Published online

2015-03-02

Page views

1393

Article views/downloads

2024

DOI

10.5603/FM.2015.0016

Pubmed

25792403

Bibliographic record

Folia Morphol 2015;74(1):100-105.

Keywords

percutaneous coronary intervention
catheterisation
transradial

Authors

E. Wessel
K. Hessel
A. Glaros
A. Olinger

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