Clinically Significant Anatomical Variations

Clinically Significant Anatomical Variations

Clinically Significant Anatomical Variations

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Introduction to Variations - Normal vs. Naughty

  • Variation (Normal): Common deviations in typical anatomy. Usually asymptomatic, no functional impact; part of human diversity.
  • Anomaly: Significant structural defect, often congenital. May impair function or health.
  • Clinically Significant (Naughty): Variations become "naughty" when they:
    • Mimic disease on imaging.
    • Complicate surgery or procedures (e.g., aberrant vessels).
    • Predispose to pathology.
    • Alter clinical presentation of diseases.

⭐ A common vascular variation, like an aberrant obturator artery (Crown of Death), can lead to severe hemorrhage if unrecognized during hernia repair surgery.

Vascular Variations - Risky Routes

  • Aberrant Obturator Artery (Corona Mortis):
    • From ext. iliac/inf. epigastric a.; crosses superior pubic ramus.
    • ⚠️ Risk: Major bleeding if cut in hernia repair (femoral), pelvic surgery. ~20-30% incidence. Bilateral Corona Mortis and Inguinal Hernial Orifices
  • Persistent Median Artery:
    • With median nerve in carpal tunnel; can be prominent.
    • ⚠️ Risk: May cause/worsen Carpal Tunnel Syndrome (CTS); injury in CTS release. ~8-20% incidence.
  • Accessory Renal Arteries:
    • To renal poles (often inferior); ~30% incidence.
    • ⚠️ Risk: Ligation in renal surgery/transplant → segmental ischemia/infarction.
  • Replaced/Accessory Hepatic Arteries:
    • Replaced RHA from SMA (10-15%); Replaced LHA from Lt. Gastric A. (10-25%).
    • ⚠️ Risk: Injury during cholecystectomy (Calot's), Whipple.
  • Thyroidea Ima Artery:
    • Variable origin (e.g. brachiocephalic); anterior to trachea. ~3-10% incidence.
    • ⚠️ Risk: Significant bleeding in tracheostomy, thyroidectomy.

⭐ "Corona Mortis": aberrant obturator artery/vein or anastomosis over superior pubic ramus; high bleeding risk in pelvic/inguinal surgery.

Neuro-Musculoskeletal Variations - Tricky Tissues

  • Nerve Variations:
    • Brachial Plexus: Prefixed/Postfixed. Impacts blocks, TOS.
    • Median Nerve Anastomoses:
      • MGA: Median→Ulnar (forearm).
      • RCA: Ulnar→Median (hand).
      • 📌 MGA (Forearm), RCA (Hand).
    • Sciatic Nerve: High division, piriformis variations. Injection risk, piriformis syndrome.
  • Muscle/Osseous Variations:
    • Accessory Muscles: Sternalis (chest mass mimic), Acc. Soleus (ankle mass/pain).
    • Supracondylar Process (Humerus) & Struthers' Ligament: Median N./Brachial A. compression.
    • Fabella: Sesamoid in lat. gastrocnemius. Posterolateral knee pain.
    • Os Trigonum: Unfused post. talus. Posterior ankle impingement.

⭐ Supracondylar process of humerus (~1% population) with Struthers' ligament can compress median nerve/brachial artery.

Visceral & Other Variations - Organ Oddities

  • Situs Inversus:
    • Totalis: Complete mirror image transposition of viscera (e.g., dextrocardia with abdominal organ reversal).
    • Partialis: Involves only specific organs (e.g., isolated Dextrocardia).
    • Clinical: Altered physical exam findings, ECG changes (inverted P, QRS in lead I), crucial for surgical planning.
  • Accessory Organs/Lobes:
    • Spleen: Splenunculi (accessory spleens); common, usually asymptomatic, may hypertrophy post-splenectomy.
    • Liver: Riedel's lobe (tongue-like projection of right lobe); may mimic hepatomegaly.
    • Lung: Azygos lobe (azygos vein indents superomedial aspect of right upper lobe).
  • Renal Variations:
    • Horseshoe Kidney: Fusion of lower poles (usually); ↑ risk of UTI, stones, hydronephrosis, certain cancers.
    • Pelvic Kidney: Failure to ascend; may be mistaken for pelvic mass.
  • Meckel's Diverticulum: 📌 Rule of 2s: 2% population, 2 feet from ileocecal valve, 2 inches long, 2% symptomatic (often by age 2), 2 types ectopic tissue (gastric most common, pancreatic).
  • Pancreas Divisum: Most common congenital pancreatic anomaly; failure of ventral & dorsal pancreatic bud fusion.

⭐ Horseshoe kidney is the most common renal fusion anomaly, found in approximately 1 in 400 to 600 individuals.

  • Gallbladder Variations: Phrygian cap (folding of fundus); usually incidental finding, rarely symptomatic. Duplication or agenesis are rare.

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Accessory renal arteries: Common; risk UPJ obstruction or surgical injury.
  • Persistent Left SVC (PLSVC): Most common thoracic venous anomaly; drains to coronary sinus.
  • Aberrant Right Subclavian Artery (Arteria Lusoria): May cause dysphagia lusoria via esophageal compression.
  • Meckel's Diverticulum: Vitelline duct remnant; Rule of 2s (2% prevalence, 2 feet from ICV, 2 inches).
  • Cystic Artery Variations: Crucial in cholecystectomy to prevent biliary injury.
  • Anomalous Coronary Artery Origins: Can cause myocardial ischemia or sudden cardiac death.

Practice Questions: Clinically Significant Anatomical Variations

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