Conus artery

The conus artery (third coronary artery) is a coronary artery that is present in only 45 percent of human hearts.[1][2] The conus artery may provide collateral blood flow to the heart when the left anterior descending artery is occluded.[3] In one study, 305 cadaveric specimens were examined to determine the origin of the conus coronary artery. The authors found that the conus artery could arise independently from the aorta or from a common ostium with the right coronary artery.[2]

References

  1. Schlesinger MJ, Zoll PM, Wessler S (1949). "The conus artery: a third coronary artery". American Heart Journal. 38 (6): 823–38. doi:10.1016/0002-8703(49)90884-4. PMID 15395916.
  2. 1 2 Edwards BS, Edwards WD, Edwards JE (1981). "Aortic origin of conus coronary artery. Evidence of postnatal coronary development". British Heart Journal. 45 (5): 555–558. doi:10.1136/hrt.45.5.555. PMC 482564Freely accessible. PMID 7236461.
  3. Wynn GJ, Noronha B, Burgess MI (2008). "Functional significance of the conus artery as a collateral to an occluded left anterior descending artery demonstrated by stress echocardiography". International Journal of Cardiology. 140 (1): e14–5. doi:10.1016/j.ijcard.2008.11.039. PMID 19108914.
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