Browsing by Author "Marinkovic, Slobodan V. (7005202323)"
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Publication The neurovascular relationships and the blood supply of the abducent nerve: Surgical anatomy of its cisternal segment(1994) ;Marinkovic, Slobodan V. (7005202323) ;Gibo, Hirohiko (7003507969)Stimec, Bojan (7003411337)TWENTY-EIGHT ABDUCENT NERVES were examined after injecting india ink and gelatin into the vertebrobasilar arterial system. All the abducent nerves were found to be crossed and/or penetrated by the surrounding vessels. The ventral surface of the nerves was crossed by the anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA) (75.0%), the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (17.85%), the common trunk of the AICA and posterior inferior cerebellar artery (7.14%), the internal auditory artery (14.28%), the anterolateral artery (46.43%), the pontomedullary artery (92.86%), and the corresponding veins (46.43%). The dorsal surface of the cisternal segment was crossed by the AICA (35.71%), the inferolateral pontine artery (10.71%), the anterolateral artery (82.14%), and the certain veins (46.43%). Sixty-four percent of the cisternal segments were penetrated by one or more of the following vessels: the AICA (25.0%), the anterolateral artery (17.86%), the pontomedullary artery (3.57%), and/or by the corresponding veins (42.86%). The majority of the cisternal segments of the abducent nerves were supplied by the anterolateral arteries (85.71%), and only some of them by the AICA (14.29%) or the pontomedullary artery (7.14%). The authors discuss the possible clinical significance of the anatomical data. © by the Congress of Neurological Surgeons. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication The surgical anatomy of the perforating branches of the basilar artery(1993) ;Marinkovic, Slobodan V. (7005202323)Gibo, Hirohiko (7003507969)THE PERFORATING BRANCHES of the basilar artery were examined in 14 brain stems injected with india ink or methylmethacrylate. Three groups of the perforators were distinguished: the caudal, the middle, and the rostral. The caudal perforators varied in number from two to five and in diameter from 80 to 600 μm. In addition to their terminal branches, which entered the foramen cecum, the perforators occasionally branched off the pontomedullary artery, the pyramidal vessels, and the hypoglossal branches. The middle perforators arose either separately from the basilar artery or along with the basilar artery collateral branches. They ranged in number from five to nine and in diameter from 210 to 940 μm. The perforators gave rise to the pontomedullary artery (8.3%), the long pontine arteries (25.0%), and the anterolateral vessels (100%). The rostral perforators originated from the terminal part of the basilar artery (91.6%), as well as from the superior cerebellar artery (91.6%) and the posterolateral artery (16.6%). They varied in number from one to five and in diameter from 190 to 800 μm. The anastomoses among various perforating vessels were noted in 41.6 to 66.6% of the cases. The authors discussed the possible clinical significance of the anatomical data observed in this study. © by the Congress of Neurological Surgeons.
