CARDIAC ANATOMY
The
left internal mammary artery supplies
the anterior chest wall.
It has been shown to be superior to saphenous
vein grafts (from aorta
to LAD) in staying
patent and hence is now
the choice artery (LIMA to LAD) graft. Although circumflex and right
coronary arteries are usually grafted
with veins, the right internal
mammary arteries (RIMA) are sometimes used
to graft the RCA.
The
circumflex artery gives off obtuse marginal branches and the LAD gives off diagonal branches.
The
intermediate artery
is not always present, it is a variant artery which is between the LAD and circumflex artery, and occasionally dominant instead
of the circumflex.
The
coronary sinus predominantly drains venous
blood from the left ventricle and receives approximately 85
percent of coronary venous blood. It receives blood from the the
marginal, posterior left ventricular, anterior interventricular veins and the great cardiac vein. The blood finally drains into the right atrium.
The
posterior descending artery is
often (85%) a branch
of the right coronary
artery. The sinus node
artery is a branch
of the right coronary
artery in 60% of cases.
The
AV node is supplied by the
posterior descending coronary
artery.
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