Abstract

The authors observed a variation of the inferior mesenteric artery, which arose from the superior mesenteric artery, in a 69-year-old Japanese male cadaver during dissection in 1984. In this case, no rudiment of the ordinary inferior mesenteric artery could be found on the abdominal aorta. There are few reports of this variation, and an extensive search of the available literature revealed only four cases, including two in Japan. Such a variation had been somewhat inadequately described as an "absence of the inferior mesenteric artery" in the previous reports, but we avoided this terminology, because all of the cases possessed an artery, which, though arising from the superior mesenteric artery instead of the abdominal aorta, had the same branches as a normal inferior mesenteric artery. Consistent with findings observed in the previous cases, the unusual inferior mesenteric artery arose as the first branch of the superior mesenteric artery, with the common trunk of both mesenteric arteries originating from the abdominal aorta at a level at which an ordinary superior mesenteric artery would arise. It is for this reason that we did not adopt another acceptable name, that is, "the common mesenteric artery," for this variation. The variation can be explained as the result of an unusual development of the embryonic artery system, which comprises a number of ventral splanchnic arteries interconnected by longitudinal anastomotic channels to supply the primitive digestive tube.

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