open access

Vol 80, No 4 (2021)
Original article
Submitted: 2020-07-02
Accepted: 2020-08-21
Published online: 2020-09-02
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Anatomical study of the common iliac arteries

E. Panagouli1, I. Antonopoulos1, V. Protogerou1, T. Troupis1
·
Pubmed: 32896870
·
Folia Morphol 2021;80(4):845-849.
Affiliations
  1. Department of Anatomy, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece

open access

Vol 80, No 4 (2021)
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Submitted: 2020-07-02
Accepted: 2020-08-21
Published online: 2020-09-02

Abstract

Background: The common iliac arteries (CIA) are the two terminal branches of the abdominal aorta which supply the pelvis and the lower extremities. The present study aims to examine the morphometric features of the CIA in a cadaveric sample and possible correlations between lengths.
Materials and methods: Seventy-six formalin fixed cadavers of Greek origin were dissected in the Department of Anatomy, School of Medicine, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens. In each cadaver dissected, the abdominal aorta and the CIA were identified and their lengths were measured. Also the torso length was measured and the height of each cadaver. All the statistical analysis was done by SPSS 15.0.
Results: The mean length of the left CIA was 6.12 cm (SD: ± 1.791, SE: 0.205) and that of the right one was 6.03 cm (SD: ± 1.607, SE: 0.184). The lengths of the CIA differed between the sexes, but no statistically significant difference was observed. Statistically significant differences regarding the torso lengths and body heights were found between the sexes, as well as a statistically strong correlation between the lengths of the left and right CIA in the cadavers dissected.
Conclusions: The knowledge of the anatomy and morphology of the CIA is ofgreat clinical significance, given that abnormal course, length or branching pattern of these vessels are not uncommon and their clinical impact may be great. Mostly interventional radiologists and vascular surgeons should be aware of this knowledge.

Abstract

Background: The common iliac arteries (CIA) are the two terminal branches of the abdominal aorta which supply the pelvis and the lower extremities. The present study aims to examine the morphometric features of the CIA in a cadaveric sample and possible correlations between lengths.
Materials and methods: Seventy-six formalin fixed cadavers of Greek origin were dissected in the Department of Anatomy, School of Medicine, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens. In each cadaver dissected, the abdominal aorta and the CIA were identified and their lengths were measured. Also the torso length was measured and the height of each cadaver. All the statistical analysis was done by SPSS 15.0.
Results: The mean length of the left CIA was 6.12 cm (SD: ± 1.791, SE: 0.205) and that of the right one was 6.03 cm (SD: ± 1.607, SE: 0.184). The lengths of the CIA differed between the sexes, but no statistically significant difference was observed. Statistically significant differences regarding the torso lengths and body heights were found between the sexes, as well as a statistically strong correlation between the lengths of the left and right CIA in the cadavers dissected.
Conclusions: The knowledge of the anatomy and morphology of the CIA is ofgreat clinical significance, given that abnormal course, length or branching pattern of these vessels are not uncommon and their clinical impact may be great. Mostly interventional radiologists and vascular surgeons should be aware of this knowledge.

Get Citation

Keywords

anatomy, morphology, morphometry, abdominal aorta, cadaver, measurements

About this article
Title

Anatomical study of the common iliac arteries

Journal

Folia Morphologica

Issue

Vol 80, No 4 (2021)

Article type

Original article

Pages

845-849

Published online

2020-09-02

Page views

6776

Article views/downloads

1960

DOI

10.5603/FM.a2020.0109

Pubmed

32896870

Bibliographic record

Folia Morphol 2021;80(4):845-849.

Keywords

anatomy
morphology
morphometry
abdominal aorta
cadaver
measurements

Authors

E. Panagouli
I. Antonopoulos
V. Protogerou
T. Troupis

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