Pathways and morphologic pattern of BLOOD SUPPLY OF EPICARDIAL GANGLIONATED NERVE PLEXUS

This study addresses this by mapping the routes and morphological pattern of blood supply to the epicardial GP in a large-animal pig model (Sus scrofa domesticus). Twenty-five domestic pigs were used in the study. We demonstrate that the epicardial ganglionated nerves receive blood from both coronary and extra-cardiac arteries. The coronary arterial branches supply blood to all five subplexuses constituting the epicardial GP. In contrast, the branches of extra-cardiac arteries supply blood to target heart areas: 1) the venous part of the heart hilum on the left atrium, 2) the walls of the sinuses of the right cranial (superior cava) and 3) pulmonary veins. Uniformly, epicardial nerves and ganglia are supplied with blood via a sole epineurial arteriole which, in most cases, is the fifth/sixth-order branch of the coronary arteries. The extra-cardiac arteries supplying blood to the epicardial GP accompanied the mediastinal nerves entering the epicardium within the limits of the heart hilum. Together, the dual and triple blood supply of the epicardial nerves and ganglia suggests a protective role from an ischemic event and/or ischemic heart disease. STUCTURED ABSTRACT: This study details the anatomy of the blood supply of epicardial ganglionated nerve plexus, from which nerve fibres extend to the myocardium, heart conduction system, coronary vessels, and endocardium, in the most popular animal model of experimental cardiology and cardiac surgery - the domestic pig. Our observatio...
Source: Annals of Anatomy - Category: Anatomy Authors: Source Type: research