The Blood Supply to the Great Toe Sesamoids

Author:

Chamberland Patricia D. C.1,Smith Judith W.2,Fleming Lamar L.3

Affiliation:

1. Resident of Orthopaedic Surgery, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia.

2. Assistant Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery, Emory University School of Medicine.

3. Chairman, Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery, Emory University School of Medicine.

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to define the intraosseous and extraosseous blood supply of the hallucal sesamoids by studying a total of 10 fresh-frozen, below-knee specimens with no evidence of vascular disease. Most specimens were injected with high grade India ink, cleared using a standard Spalteholz technique, and processed to delineate the extraosseous and intraosseous blood supply to include soft tissue dissection and coronal sectioning. Two additional specimens were injected with blue Mercox acrylic solution to further define the extraosseous vasculature. The major extraosseous blood supply to the sesamoids is via the posterior tibial artery. This vessel then branches into the medial plantar artery which further divides upon entering the medial and lateral sesamoids in their proximal poles. Vessels in the peripheral soft tissues, although abundant, do not seem to penetrate the cortex of the sesamoids. The intraosseous blood supply to the sesamoids seems to be threefold. Mainly, sesamoid arteries enter the lateral and medial sesamoids from the proximal aspect via a single vessel. This proximal vessel proceeds distally with a network of branching. Plantar, nonarticular vessels enter the sesamoids, constituting a second source of vascularity. Finally, small vessels also enter the sesamoids through medial and lateral capsular attachments. Based on this study, a possible explanation for avascular necrosis and nonunion of sesamoids is proposed, and an optimal surgical approach is discussed. A medial operative approach avoiding the proximal pole of the sesamoids will preserve the main arterial source. The plantar surface of the sesamoids should also be avoided. Minimal dissection through the circumferential soft tissue vascular sleeve is recommended.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

Reference35 articles.

1. Haematogenous osteomyelitis of the metatarsal sesamoid

2. 4. Crock H.J.: The Blood Supply of the Lower Limb Bones of Man. Edinburgh, E & S Livingstone, 1967, pp. 76–87, 101, 368–371.

3. Anatomical study of the sesamoid bones of the first metatarsal

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