Vasculature of the Back

Vasculature of the Back

Vasculature of the Back

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Arterial Supply - Back's Bloodlines

  • Segmental Arteries:
    • Posterior Intercostal Arteries (Thorax): Supply erector spinae, overlying skin.
    • Lumbar Arteries (Abdomen): Supply lumbar muscles, skin.
    • Lateral Sacral Arteries (Pelvis): Supply sacral canal structures, piriformis.
  • Other Key Contributors:
    • Vertebral Artery: Cervical vertebrae, deep cervical muscles.
    • Subclavian Artery Branches:
      • Dorsal Scapular A.: Rhomboids, levator scapulae.
      • Suprascapular A.: Supraspinatus, infraspinatus.
      • Costocervical Trunk (Deep Cervical A.): Deep neck muscles.
  • Distribution Pattern: Dorsal rami supply intrinsic back muscles & skin. Spinal branches supply vertebrae, cord.

⭐ The Artery of Adamkiewicz, usually a left posterior intercostal branch (T9-T12), is vital for lumbosacral spinal cord perfusion. Its damage causes anterior spinal syndrome.

Venous Drainage - Return Routes

  • Vertebral Venous Plexuses (VVP): Primary network for the vertebral column & spinal cord.
    • Internal (Epidural) VVP: Located in the epidural space, within the vertebral canal, external to the dura mater.
    • External VVP: Surrounds the vertebral column (anteriorly & posteriorly).
    • Both plexuses anastomose freely with each other and with regional veins.
  • Intervertebral Veins: Traverse intervertebral foramina.
    • Connect VVP with segmental veins of the trunk (e.g., posterior intercostal, lumbar veins).
    • Receive veins from the spinal cord and spinal nerve roots.
  • Segmental Drainage Pathways:
    • To posterior intercostal veins → Azygos/hemiazygos system → SVC.
    • To lumbar veins → Ascending lumbar veins / IVC.
    • To lateral sacral veins → Internal iliac veins.
  • Batson's Plexus (VVP component):
    • Valveless system; allows bidirectional blood flow (e.g., ↑ intra-abdominal pressure can reverse flow). Batson's plexus and vertebral venous drainage

⭐ The valveless nature of Batson's (vertebral) venous plexus facilitates hematogenous spread of pelvic/abdominal malignancies (e.g., prostate, breast cancer) to the vertebrae, skull, and brain, bypassing pulmonary circulation.

Spinal Cord Supply - Cord's Critical Flow

  • Longitudinal Arteries:
    • Anterior Spinal Artery (ASA):
      • From vertebral arteries.
      • Supplies anterior 2/3rds of cord.
    • Posterior Spinal Arteries (PSAs) (2):
      • From vertebral arteries or PICA (Posterior Inferior Cerebellar Artery).
      • Supply posterior 1/3rd of cord.
  • Segmental/Reinforcing Arteries:
    • Radicular/Medullary Arteries: Enter via intervertebral foramina, anastomose with ASA/PSAs.
    • Artery of Adamkiewicz (Great Anterior Radicular Artery):
      • Largest segmental medullary artery; major supply to lumbosacral cord.
      • Typically arises T9-L2, usually on the left. Critical for lower cord perfusion.
  • Venous Drainage:
    • Longitudinal (anterior/posterior spinal veins) & radicular veins.
    • Drain to Internal Vertebral Venous Plexus (Batson's - valveless, potential route for metastasis).
  • Watershed Areas:
    • Mid-thoracic (e.g., T4-T8) & thoracolumbar junction; vulnerable to ischemia, particularly during systemic hypotension.

Spinal cord arterial supply diagram

⭐ Occlusion of the Artery of Adamkiewicz can cause Anterior Cord Syndrome: characterized by bilateral motor paralysis and loss of pain/temperature sensation below the level of the lesion, with proprioception and vibration sense (posterior column functions) typically spared.

Clinical Pearls - Vascular Vulnerabilities

  • Spinal Cord Ischemia:
    • Anterior Spinal Artery (ASA) syndrome: loss of motor, pain, temp; spares dorsal columns.
    • Watershed zones (mid-thoracic, T-L junction) vulnerable.
    • Risks: aortic surgery, hypotension, atherosclerosis.
  • Artery of Adamkiewicz:
    • Key supply to lumbosacral cord.
    • Usually T9-L2 (left). 📌 Adam is Left at T10. Injury → ASA syndrome.
  • Batson's Venous Plexus:
    • Valveless; aids metastasis (prostate, breast) & infection to spine.

⭐ Batson's plexus: direct hematogenous spread of pelvic/abdominal cancer to vertebrae, bypassing lungs.

  • Spinal Epidural Hematoma:
    • Acute cord compression. Often venous origin from internal vertebral plexus.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Arterial supply to the back: chiefly posterior intercostal and lumbar arteries.
  • Spinal cord: supplied by one anterior & two posterior spinal arteries, plus segmental medullary arteries.
  • Artery of Adamkiewicz: a key segmental medullary artery for lower spinal cord supply.
  • Venous drainage: via internal (Batson's) and external vertebral venous plexuses.
  • Batson's plexus: valveless, facilitating metastatic spread (e.g., prostate cancer to vertebrae).

Practice Questions: Vasculature of the Back

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