Posterior humeral circumflex artery

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Posterior humeral circumflex artery
Axillary branches.PNG
The axillary artery and its branches, including posterior humeral circumflex.
Gray524.png
The scapular and circumflex arteries. (Posterior hum. circumflex labeled at center right.)
Details
Sourceaxillary artery
Identifiers
Latinarteria circumflexa humeri posterior
Anatomical terminology

The posterior humeral circumflex artery (posterior circumflex artery, posterior circumflex humeral artery) arises from the third part of axillary artery at the lower border of the subscapularis, and runs posteriorly with the axillary nerve through the quadrangular space.

It winds around the surgical neck of the humerus and is distributed to the deltoid muscle and shoulder-joint, anastomosing with the anterior humeral circumflex and deep artery of the arm.

It supplies the teres major, teres minor, deltoid, and (long head only) triceps muscles.[1]

Additional images

See also

References

  1. ^ Clinically Oriented Anatomy 7th ed. 2014. p. 718.

Public domain This article incorporates text in the public domain from the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

External links