Abstract

The vascularization of the posterolateral area of the arm is supplied by the terminal branches of the deep brachial artery [middle collateral artery (MCA) and posterior radial collateral artery]. Their anatomy has been a field of confusion for a long time. An extended lateral arm flap, named the "extreme" lateral arm flap, supplied by these branches and dissected as a retrograde island flap has been proposed as an alternative for large compound defects of the distal forearm. We carried out an extensive anatomic study of the "extreme" lateral arm flap on 69 upper limbs: 54 fresh injected with colored latex, 10 embalmed and 5 radiographed after Micropaque injection. Two origin levels of the MCA were found: a proximal one (37%) above the radial groove, and a distal one (63%) at the level of the groove. The deep brachial artery always bifurcated after the origin of the MCA into a posterior radial collateral artery (PRCA) and anterior radial collateral artery (ARCA). Indeed in our dissections, after the origin of the MCA from the deep brachial artery, there was always a common trunk named the radial collateral artery (RCA) which bifurcated into the ARCA and PRCA. In all dissected arms we always found the MCA anastomosed in a transverse pattern with the inferior ulnar collateral artery (IUCA), contributing to the anastomotic circle of the elbow. This circle represents the unique vascularization source of the reverse "extreme" lateral arm flap.

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