| Literature DB >> 32112283 |
J C E Donders1, J Prins1, P Kloen2, G J Streekstra3, P A Cole4, R P Kleipool5, J G G Dobbe3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The aim of this study is to describe the number and location of the nutrient foramina in human scapulae which can minimize blood loss during surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Computed tomography; Nutrient foramen; Scapula; Three-dimensional topography; Vascularity
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32112283 PMCID: PMC7347675 DOI: 10.1007/s00276-020-02441-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Radiol Anat ISSN: 0930-1038 Impact factor: 1.246
Fig. 1a Segmented scapula model showing a local coordinate system based on the axes of inertia (red X, Y, and Z axes). All scapulae are aligned by their local coordinate system, and scaled anisotropically by the dimensions (height, width, thickness) of the "bounding box" (white girder) of each scapula. b Nutrient foramina locations are projected on the lines between AB, AC and BC and provide the 2.5% and 97.5% percentile, and hence the 95% confidence range where nutrient foramina are likely to occur. By back projecting these ranges perpendicular to the respective lines (red dashed lines) a region (blue) is identified were nutrient foramina are likely to occur. A: anterolateral corner of acromion, B: medial border of the spine of the scapula, and C: inferior angle of the scapula
Nutrient foramina (NF) per topographical area
| Topographical area | Number of NF ( | Number of scapulae ( | Average number of NF per scapula (range) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subscapular fossa | 41 (25.9%) | 25 (83.3%) | 1.6 (0–4) |
| Supraspinous fossa | 47 (29.7%) | 28 (93.3%) | 1.7 (0–3) |
| Infraspinous fossa | 42 (26.6%) | 26 (86.7%) | 1.6 (0–3) |
| Peri-glenoid | 28 (17.7%) | 16 (53.3%) | 1.8 (0–2) |
Total NF per scapula 5.3 (0–10)
Fig. 2a Costal surface of the scapula showing 95% of the nutrient foramina on the subscapular fossa (green) and peri-glenoid area (red). A, B and C are the scapula landmark locations (see Fig. 1a). b Posterior surface of the scapula showing 95% of the nutrient foramina located on the infraspinous fossa (blue). A, B and C are the scapula landmark locations (see Fig. 1a). c Superior view of the scapula showing nutrient foramina on the supraspinous fossa (light blue). A, B and C are the scapula landmark locations (see Fig. 1a)
Topographical areas projected on the lines between the references points, expressed in % of the respective line lengths (median, 95% central range)
| Topographical area | Distance in % | Distance in % | Distance in % |
|---|---|---|---|
| AB linea | AC lineb | BC linec | |
| Subscapular fossa | 54.0 (46.5–94.9) | 37.1 (33.0–79.2) | 8.7 (− 1.6 to 64.7) |
| Supraspinous fossa | 44.3 (37.8–62.4) | 29.0 (24.8–38.0) | − 2.1 (− 6.1 to 1.7) |
| Infraspinous fossa | 57.7 (49.7–87.8) | 40.2 (33.3–53.9) | 6.7 (− 4.1 to 20.4) |
| Peri-glenoid | 40.6 (23.5–52.4) | 37.9 (15.8–46.7) | 28.7 (− 10.2 to 37.7) |
aAB line—distance between the anterolateral acromion (0%) and the medial border spina (100%)
bAC line—distance between the anterolateral acromion (0%) and the inferior scapular angle (100%)
cBC line—distance between the medial border spina (0%) and the inferior scapular angle (100%)