Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
Abstrakty
The corona mortis is an anatomic variant that involves anastomosis between obturator vessels, external iliac vessels and/or inferior epigastric vessels. It is clinically and surgically important because its section may lead to fatal consequences when pelvic procedures are performed. We report a case in which, during an anatomical dissection in a female cadaver, a bilateral corona mortis that involved obturator vessels and external iliac vessels was found, presenting differences on each side, an undescribed type of corona mortis was found and a classification modification was proposed. (Folia Morphologica 2016; 74, 3: 409–412)
Słowa kluczowe
Wydawca
Czasopismo
Rocznik
Tom
Numer
Opis fizyczny
p.409-412,fig.,ref.
Twórcy
autor
- Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, Finis Terrae University, Santiago, Chile
autor
- Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, Finis Terrae University, Pedro de Valdivia 1509, Providencia, Santiago, Chile
autor
- Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, Finis Terrae University, Santiago, Chile
Bibliografia
- 1. Berberoğlu M, Uz A, Ozmen MM, Bozkurt MC, Erkuran C, Taner S, Tekin A, Tekdemir I (2001) Corona mortis: an anatomic study in seven cadavers and an endoscopic study in 28 patients. Surg Endosc, 15: 72–75.
- 2. Darmanis S, Lewis A, Mansoor A, Bircher M (2007) Corona mortis: an anatomical study with clinical implications in approaches to the pelvis and acetabulum. Clin Anat N Y N, 20: 433–439.
- 3. Garrido-Gómez J, Pena-Rodríguez C, Martín-Noguerol T, Hernández-Cortes P (2012) Corona mortis artery avulsion due to a stable pubic ramus fracture. Orthopedics, 35: e80–e82.
- 4. Gobrecht U, Kuhn A, Fellman B (2011) Injury of the corona mortis during vaginal tape insertion (TVT-SecurTM using the U-Approach). Int Urogynecology J, 22: 443–445.
- 5. Hong H, Pan Z, Chen X, Huang Z (2004) An anatomical study of corona mortis and its clinical significance. Chin J Traumatol Zhonghua Chuang Shang Za Zhi Chin Med Assoc, 7: 165–169.
- 6. Karakurt L, Karaca I, Yilmaz E, Burma O, Serin E (2002) Corona mortis: incidence and location. Arch Orthop Trauma Surg, 122: 163–164.
- 7. Lau H, Lee F (2003) A prospective endoscopic study of retropubic vascular anatomy in 121 patients undergoing endoscopic extraperitoneal inguinal hernioplasty. Surg Endosc, 17: 1376–1379.
- 8. Okcu G, Erkan S, Yercan HS, Ozic U (2004) The incidence and location of corona mortis: a study on 75 cadavers. Acta Orthop Scand, 75: 53–55.
- 9. Pellegrino A, Damiani GR, Marco S, Ciro S, Cofelice V, Rosati F (2014) Corona mortis exposition during laparoscopic procedure for gynecological malignancies. Updat Surg, 66: 65–68.
- 10. Pungpapong S, Thum-umnauysuk S (2005) Incidence of corona mortis: preperitoneal anatomy for laparoscopic hernia repair. J Med Assoc Thail Chotmaihet Thangphaet, 88 (suppl. 4): S51–S53.
- 11. Rusu MC, Cergan R, Motoc AGM, Folescu R, Pop E (2010) Anatomical considerations on the corona mortis. Surg Radiol Anat SRA, 32: 17–24.
- 12. Sarikcioglu L, Sindel M, Akyildiz F, Gur S (2003) Anastomotic vessels in the retropubic region: corona mortis. Folia Morphol, 62: 179–182.
- 13. Stavropoulou-Deli A, Anagnostopoulou (2013) S. Corona mortis: anatomical data and clinical considerations. Aust N Z J Obstet Gynaecol, 53: 283–286.
- 14. Smith JC, Gregorius JC, Breazeale BH, Watkins GE (2009) The corona mortis, a frequent vascular variant susceptible to blunt pelvic trauma: identification at routine multidetector CT. J Vasc Interv Radiol, 20: 455–460.
- 15. Tornetta P, Hochwald N, Levine R (1996) Corona mortis. Incidence and location. Clin Orthop, 329: 97–101.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikatory
Identyfikator YADDA
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