1994
DOI: 10.1007/bf01627691
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A case of bilateral anomalous origin for dorsalis pedis arteries (anomalous dorsalis pedis arteries)

Abstract: A case of bilateral anomalous arterial supply of the lower limb is presented. In this case, both anterior tibial arteries were hypoplastic. These arteries came to the anterior (extensor) compartment by passing superiorly through the interosseous membrane. They ran between the tibialis anterior and the extensor hallucis longus muscles and terminated after giving numerous muscular and fascial branches. The dorsalis pedis arteries originated from the peroneal arteries. The peroneal arteries reached the anterior c… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…In present case the right dorsalis pedis artery was replaced by the perforating branch of the fibular artery. Similar anomalies were described unilaterally by Ali & Mohajir (1996) and bilaterally by Tuncel et al (1994). Rodríguez (1993) described the coexistence of campomelic syndrome with marked deficiency of the anterior tibial artery.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 75%
“…In present case the right dorsalis pedis artery was replaced by the perforating branch of the fibular artery. Similar anomalies were described unilaterally by Ali & Mohajir (1996) and bilaterally by Tuncel et al (1994). Rodríguez (1993) described the coexistence of campomelic syndrome with marked deficiency of the anterior tibial artery.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 75%
“…4 6.7% 3 and 2% in our study (We have excluded those limbs where DPA was branch of loop formed by ATA and PBPA 6%). Isolated cases of PBPA continuing as DPA has been reported by Tuncel et al, 11 Ali and Mohajir 12 and Shetty et al 13 DPA deviated laterally in such cases and is very likely to be missed during manual examination pedal pulse. Vasudha and Ramesh 6 mention similar lateral deviation in 6% of the cases (►Table 2).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…The dorsalis pedis artery and the PTA pulses may be palpable, because they arise from perforating branches of the dominant FA, confusing the clinician that the blood supply is typical. 11 Careful examination may reveal that in such cases the dorsalis pedis artery course is more laterally positioned than typical and the medial plantar artery originates deeply as a medial terminal branch of the enlarged FA or may even be absent. With detection of any clinical anatomical variant an angiogram or magnetic resonance angiography is necessary.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%