Dissemin is shutting down on January 1st, 2025

Published in

WB Saunders, The Journal of Hand Surgery, 4(15), p. 630-636

DOI: 10.1016/s0363-5023(09)90027-2

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Vascular anatomy of the pronator quadratus muscle-bone flap: A justification for its use with a distally based blood supply

Journal article published in 1990 by Santosh Rath ORCID, L. K. Hung, P. C. Leung
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

The vascular anatomy of the pronator quadratus muscle and distal radius was studied in 24 cadaveric forearms by dissection under magnification and india ink and latex injection studies. The anterior interosseous artery divides into a muscular branch and a dorsal branch 1 cm to 3.5 cm from the proximal margin of the pronator quadratus muscle, and on its deep surface. Injection studies showed a rich periosteal plexus contributed by the anterior interosseous artery. Retrograde injection through the dorsal branch also showed good perfusion of the distal radius that was confirmed microscopically on bone sections. A muscle-bone graft from the anteromedial cortex of distal radius with an intact anterior interosseous artery has mobility of less than 2 cm. After ligating and dividing the anterior interosseous artery, blood supply to the distal radius bone flap relies on a retrograde flow and the bone flap could then be mobilized distally up to 4 to 6 cm.