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Lei Wang, MD, PhD, Jian Zhang, MD, PhD, Shijie Xin, MD, PhD 

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Presentation on theme: "Lei Wang, MD, PhD, Jian Zhang, MD, PhD, Shijie Xin, MD, PhD "— Presentation transcript:

1 Morphologic features of the aortic arch and its branches in the adult Chinese population 
Lei Wang, MD, PhD, Jian Zhang, MD, PhD, Shijie Xin, MD, PhD  Journal of Vascular Surgery  Volume 64, Issue 6, Pages e1 (December 2016) DOI: /j.jvs Copyright © 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery Terms and Conditions

2 Fig Volume rendered or multiplanar reformatted views of aortic arch branching patterns. a, Type A: a normal aortic arch gives rise to the brachiocephalic trunk (BT), the left common carotid artery (LCCA), and the left subclavian artery (LSA). b, Type B1: a common origin of the BT and LCCA without other anomalies. c, Type B2: common origin of the BT and LCCA combined with the left vertebral artery (VA) arising between the LCCA and LSA. d, Type B3: common origin of the BT and LCCA combined with the left VA (arrow) arising from the arch distal to the origin of the LSA. e, Type B4: the right subclavian artery (RSA), right CCA, and LCCA share a short common trunk (arrow). f, Type C1: the left VA directly arising from the arch between the LCCA and LSA. g, Type C2: the left VA arising from the arch distal to the origin of the LSA. h, Type C3: thyroid ima artery (arrow) arising from the arch. i, Type D1: an aberrant RSA without other variations. j, Type D2: an aberrant RSA with a common origin of the right CCA and LCCA. k, Type D3: combined variations of an aberrant RSA and the type C1 pattern. l, Type E1: right-sided aortic arch associated with an aberrant LSA, which originates from the Kommerell diverticulum (arrow). Journal of Vascular Surgery  , e1DOI: ( /j.jvs ) Copyright © 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery Terms and Conditions

3 Supplementary Fig (Online only)
Schematic diagram shows different aortic arch branching patterns. Type A, a normal aortic arch gives rise to the brachiocephalic trunk (BT), the left common carotid artery (LCCA), and the left subclavian artery (LSA). Type B1, a common origin of the BT and LCCA without other anomalies. Type B2, common origin of the BT and LCCA combined with the left vertebral artery (VA) arising between the LCCA and LSA. Type B3, common origin of the BT and LCCA combined with the left VA arising from the arch distal to the origin of the LSA. Type B4, the right subclavian artery (RSA), right CCA, and LCCA share a short common trunk. Type C1, the left VA directly arising from the arch between the LCCA and LSA. Type C2, the left VA arising from the arch distal to the origin of the LSA. Type C3, thyroid ima artery arising from the arch. Type D1, an aberrant RSA without other variations. Type D2, an aberrant RSA with a common origin of the right CCA and LCCA. Type D3, combined variations of an aberrant RSA and the type C1 pattern. Type E1, right-sided aortic arch associated with an aberrant LSA. Type E2, right-sided aortic arch with mirror-image type. Journal of Vascular Surgery  , e1DOI: ( /j.jvs ) Copyright © 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery Terms and Conditions


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