From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Renal artery
Renal arteries branching left and right from the aorta (in red)
Details
Source Abdominal aorta
Branches Inferior suprarenal artery, segmental arteries, Ovarian artery
Vein Renal vein
Supplies Kidneys
Identifiers
Latinarteria renalis
MeSH D012077
TA98 A12.2.12.075
TA2 4269
FMA 14751
Anatomical terminology

The renal arteries are paired arteries that supply the kidneys with blood. Each is directed across the crus of the diaphragm, so as to form nearly a right angle.

The renal arteries carry a large portion of total blood flow to the kidneys. Up to a third of total cardiac output can pass through the renal arteries to be filtered by the kidneys.

Structure

The renal arteries normally arise at a 90° angle off of the left interior side of the abdominal aorta, immediately below the superior mesenteric artery. [1] They have a radius of approximately 0.25  cm, [2] 0.26 cm at the root. [3] The measured mean diameter can differ depending on the imaging method used. For example, the diameter was found to be 5.04 ± 0.74 mm using ultrasound but 5.68 ± 1.19 mm using angiography. [4] [5]

Due to the anatomical position of the aorta, the inferior vena cava, and the kidneys, the right renal artery is normally longer than the left renal artery. [1] [6]

Branches

Before reaching the hilus of the kidney, each artery divides into four or five branches. The anterior branches (the upper, middle, lower and apical segmental arteries) lie between the renal vein and ureter, the vein being in front, the ureter behind. The posterior branches, which are fewer in number and include the posterior segmental artery, are usually situated behind the ureter. [7]

Each vessel gives off some small inferior suprarenal branches to the suprarenal gland, the ureter, and the surrounding cellular tissue and muscles.

One or two accessory renal arteries are frequently found, especially on the left side since they usually arise from the aorta, and may come off above (more common) or below the main artery. Instead of entering the kidney at the hilus, they usually pierce the upper or lower part of the organ.

Variation

The arterial supply of the kidneys is variable and there may be one or more renal arteries supplying each kidney. [1] It is located above the renal vein. Supernumerary renal arteries (two or more arteries to a single kidney) are the most common renovascular anomaly, occurrence ranging from 25% to 40% of kidneys. [8] Aberrant renal arteries may be present, and may complicate surgical procedures. [9]

Clinical significance

Stenosis

Renal artery stenosis, or narrowing of one or both renal arteries will lead to hypertension as the affected kidneys release renin to increase blood pressure to preserve perfusion to the kidneys. RAS is typically diagnosed with duplex ultrasonography of the renal arteries. It is treated with the use of balloon angioplasty and stents, if necessary.

Atherosclerosis

Atherosclerosis can also affect the renal arteries and can lead to poor perfusion of the kidneys leading to reduced kidney function and, possibly, renal failure

Renal artery aneurysm

A dilated renal artery measuring twice its normal size indicates a renal artery aneurysm. [4]

Trauma

A renal artery is damaged in 4% of blunt traumas and 7% of penetrating traumas to the abdomen. [10]

Additional images

References

Public domain This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 610 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

  1. ^ a b c Listmann, Mishan; Tubbs, R. Shane (2020-01-01), Tubbs, R. Shane; Iwanaga, Joe; Oskouian, Rod J.; Moisi, Marc (eds.), "Chapter 19 - The Abdominal Aorta", Surgical Anatomy of the Lateral Transpsoas Approach to the Lumbar Spine, St. Louis: Elsevier, pp. 185–188, ISBN  978-0-323-67376-1, retrieved 2021-01-13
  2. ^ Kem, D. C.; Lyons, D. F.; Wenzl, J.; Halverstadt, D.; Yu, X. (2005). "Renin-Dependent Hypertension Caused by Nonfocal Stenotic Aberrant Renal Arteries: Proof of a New Syndrome". Hypertension. 46 (2): 380–5. doi: 10.1161/01.HYP.0000171185.25749.5b. PMID  15967872.
  3. ^ Ottesen, Johnny T.; Danielsen, Michael, eds. (2000). Mathematical Modelling in Medicine. IOS Press. ISBN  978-4-274-90318-2.[ page needed]
  4. ^ a b Renal Artery Aneurysm at eMedicine
  5. ^ Aytac, Suat K.; Yigit, Hasan; Sancak, Tanzer; Ozcan, Hasan (2003). "Correlation between the diameter of the main renal artery and the presence of an accessory renal artery: sonographic and angiographic evaluation". Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine. 22 (5): 433–9, quiz 440–2. doi: 10.7863/jum.2003.22.5.433. PMID  12751854. S2CID  24188140.
  6. ^ Saldarriaga, Bladimir; Pinto, Sergio A; Ballesteros, Luis E (2008). "Morphological Expression of the Renal Artery: A Direct Anatomical Study in a Colombian Half-caste Population". International Journal of Morphology. 26 (1): 31–8. doi: 10.4067/S0717-95022008000100005.
  7. ^ Leslie, Stephen W.; Sajjad, Hussain (11 Aug 2021). "Anatomy, Abdomen and Pelvis, Renal Artery". National Center for Biotechnology Information. PMID  29083626. Retrieved 15 Nov 2021.
  8. ^ Coello-Torà, Iris; Segura-Sampedro, Juan José; Pérez-Celada, Judit; Jiménez-Morillas, Patricia; Morales-Soriano, Rafael (January 2020). "[Accessory renal artery arising from infrarenal aorta, exposed during linphadenectomy due to cytoreductive surgery and HIPEC.]". Archivos Espanoles de Urologia. 73 (1): 76–77. ISSN  0004-0614. PMID  31950928.
  9. ^ Cerny, Joseph C.; Karsch, Daniel (1973-12-01). "Aberrant renal arteries". Urology. 2 (6): 623–626. doi: 10.1016/0090-4295(73)90322-1. hdl: 2027.42/33981. ISSN  0090-4295. PMID  4766019.
  10. ^ Kaufman, John A. (2004-01-01), Kaufman, JOHN A.; Lee, MICHAEL J. (eds.), "CHAPTER 12 - Renal Arteries", Vascular and Interventional Radiology, The Requisites, Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders, pp. 323–349, ISBN  978-0-8151-4369-7, retrieved 2021-01-13

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Renal artery
Renal arteries branching left and right from the aorta (in red)
Details
Source Abdominal aorta
Branches Inferior suprarenal artery, segmental arteries, Ovarian artery
Vein Renal vein
Supplies Kidneys
Identifiers
Latinarteria renalis
MeSH D012077
TA98 A12.2.12.075
TA2 4269
FMA 14751
Anatomical terminology

The renal arteries are paired arteries that supply the kidneys with blood. Each is directed across the crus of the diaphragm, so as to form nearly a right angle.

The renal arteries carry a large portion of total blood flow to the kidneys. Up to a third of total cardiac output can pass through the renal arteries to be filtered by the kidneys.

Structure

The renal arteries normally arise at a 90° angle off of the left interior side of the abdominal aorta, immediately below the superior mesenteric artery. [1] They have a radius of approximately 0.25  cm, [2] 0.26 cm at the root. [3] The measured mean diameter can differ depending on the imaging method used. For example, the diameter was found to be 5.04 ± 0.74 mm using ultrasound but 5.68 ± 1.19 mm using angiography. [4] [5]

Due to the anatomical position of the aorta, the inferior vena cava, and the kidneys, the right renal artery is normally longer than the left renal artery. [1] [6]

Branches

Before reaching the hilus of the kidney, each artery divides into four or five branches. The anterior branches (the upper, middle, lower and apical segmental arteries) lie between the renal vein and ureter, the vein being in front, the ureter behind. The posterior branches, which are fewer in number and include the posterior segmental artery, are usually situated behind the ureter. [7]

Each vessel gives off some small inferior suprarenal branches to the suprarenal gland, the ureter, and the surrounding cellular tissue and muscles.

One or two accessory renal arteries are frequently found, especially on the left side since they usually arise from the aorta, and may come off above (more common) or below the main artery. Instead of entering the kidney at the hilus, they usually pierce the upper or lower part of the organ.

Variation

The arterial supply of the kidneys is variable and there may be one or more renal arteries supplying each kidney. [1] It is located above the renal vein. Supernumerary renal arteries (two or more arteries to a single kidney) are the most common renovascular anomaly, occurrence ranging from 25% to 40% of kidneys. [8] Aberrant renal arteries may be present, and may complicate surgical procedures. [9]

Clinical significance

Stenosis

Renal artery stenosis, or narrowing of one or both renal arteries will lead to hypertension as the affected kidneys release renin to increase blood pressure to preserve perfusion to the kidneys. RAS is typically diagnosed with duplex ultrasonography of the renal arteries. It is treated with the use of balloon angioplasty and stents, if necessary.

Atherosclerosis

Atherosclerosis can also affect the renal arteries and can lead to poor perfusion of the kidneys leading to reduced kidney function and, possibly, renal failure

Renal artery aneurysm

A dilated renal artery measuring twice its normal size indicates a renal artery aneurysm. [4]

Trauma

A renal artery is damaged in 4% of blunt traumas and 7% of penetrating traumas to the abdomen. [10]

Additional images

References

Public domain This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 610 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

  1. ^ a b c Listmann, Mishan; Tubbs, R. Shane (2020-01-01), Tubbs, R. Shane; Iwanaga, Joe; Oskouian, Rod J.; Moisi, Marc (eds.), "Chapter 19 - The Abdominal Aorta", Surgical Anatomy of the Lateral Transpsoas Approach to the Lumbar Spine, St. Louis: Elsevier, pp. 185–188, ISBN  978-0-323-67376-1, retrieved 2021-01-13
  2. ^ Kem, D. C.; Lyons, D. F.; Wenzl, J.; Halverstadt, D.; Yu, X. (2005). "Renin-Dependent Hypertension Caused by Nonfocal Stenotic Aberrant Renal Arteries: Proof of a New Syndrome". Hypertension. 46 (2): 380–5. doi: 10.1161/01.HYP.0000171185.25749.5b. PMID  15967872.
  3. ^ Ottesen, Johnny T.; Danielsen, Michael, eds. (2000). Mathematical Modelling in Medicine. IOS Press. ISBN  978-4-274-90318-2.[ page needed]
  4. ^ a b Renal Artery Aneurysm at eMedicine
  5. ^ Aytac, Suat K.; Yigit, Hasan; Sancak, Tanzer; Ozcan, Hasan (2003). "Correlation between the diameter of the main renal artery and the presence of an accessory renal artery: sonographic and angiographic evaluation". Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine. 22 (5): 433–9, quiz 440–2. doi: 10.7863/jum.2003.22.5.433. PMID  12751854. S2CID  24188140.
  6. ^ Saldarriaga, Bladimir; Pinto, Sergio A; Ballesteros, Luis E (2008). "Morphological Expression of the Renal Artery: A Direct Anatomical Study in a Colombian Half-caste Population". International Journal of Morphology. 26 (1): 31–8. doi: 10.4067/S0717-95022008000100005.
  7. ^ Leslie, Stephen W.; Sajjad, Hussain (11 Aug 2021). "Anatomy, Abdomen and Pelvis, Renal Artery". National Center for Biotechnology Information. PMID  29083626. Retrieved 15 Nov 2021.
  8. ^ Coello-Torà, Iris; Segura-Sampedro, Juan José; Pérez-Celada, Judit; Jiménez-Morillas, Patricia; Morales-Soriano, Rafael (January 2020). "[Accessory renal artery arising from infrarenal aorta, exposed during linphadenectomy due to cytoreductive surgery and HIPEC.]". Archivos Espanoles de Urologia. 73 (1): 76–77. ISSN  0004-0614. PMID  31950928.
  9. ^ Cerny, Joseph C.; Karsch, Daniel (1973-12-01). "Aberrant renal arteries". Urology. 2 (6): 623–626. doi: 10.1016/0090-4295(73)90322-1. hdl: 2027.42/33981. ISSN  0090-4295. PMID  4766019.
  10. ^ Kaufman, John A. (2004-01-01), Kaufman, JOHN A.; Lee, MICHAEL J. (eds.), "CHAPTER 12 - Renal Arteries", Vascular and Interventional Radiology, The Requisites, Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders, pp. 323–349, ISBN  978-0-8151-4369-7, retrieved 2021-01-13

External links


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