| Literature DB >> 32724814 |
Tales Alexandre Aversi-Ferreira1, Emmanuel Freitas-Ferreira1, Roqueline A G M F Aversi-Ferreira1,2, Karolyne Cordeiro-de-Oliveira1, Gezianne Lopes-de-Freitas3, Kaynara Trevisan1, Giovanna Felipe Cavalcante4, Ediana Vasconcelos-da-Silva5, Sylla Figueredo-Silva4, Renata Cristina Pereira1, Dyecika Souza Couto1, Rosângela Correa Rodrigues6, Tainá de Abreu5.
Abstract
Macaca fuscata displays characteristic behaviours, such as stone handling, locomotor behaviour, gait position, and intermittent bipedalism. Differences in characteristic behaviours among primate species/genera could be explained by anatomical details of the body. However, the anatomical details have not been well studied in Macaca fuscata. Arterial models could be one of the anatomical bases for the phylogenetic and functional differences among species, since the arterial supply could be associated with the muscular performance, especially locomotor behaviour. In this study, five thoracic limbs of Macaca fuscata adults were dissected to analyse the vessels. Patterns of arterial distribution in the thoracic limbs of Macaca fuscata were compared with those in other primates. The results indicated that the arterial distribution in the Japanese monkeys was more similar to those in Macaca mulatta and Papio anubis, which is consistent with phylogenetic similarities. However, compared with Papio anubis and other macaques, there were anatomical differences in several points, including (1) the origin of the common, anterior, posterior circumflex, and profunda brachii, and (2) the origins of the collateralis ulnaris artery. The comparative anatomy of the arteries in the forelimb of Macaca fuscata, along with the anatomical studies in other primates, indicated characteristic patterns of brachial artery division and the number of the palmar arches in primates, which is consistent with the phylogenetic division among New World primates, Old World primates, and apes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32724814 PMCID: PMC7381946 DOI: 10.1155/2020/8635917
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Comparative anatomy of the forelimb arteries of Japanese monkeys (this work), including S. libidinosus (New World primate), other Macaca, P. anubis, apes, and Homo. The previous studies were cited by the initials of the first authors with the species names. O: originates from; E: emits. References: MS1: Manners-Smith, 1910a; MS2: Manners-Smith, 1910b; SW: Swindler and Wood, 1973; G: Gibbs, 1999; AV1: Aversi-Ferreira et al., 2007a; AV2: Aversi-Ferreira et al., 2007b; AV3: Aversi-Ferreira, 2009.
| Arteries/groups |
| New World primate ( |
| All apes (G) |
| |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O | E | O | E | O | E | O | E | O | E | |
| Axillary (branches in the arm) | Subclavia | Common trunk for subscapularis, circumflexa humeri cranialis and caudalis, circumflexa scapulae, thoracodorsalis, brachial | Subclavia (AV1) | Radialis, ulnaris, circumflexa humeri cranialis and caudalis, brachialis (AV2) | Subclavia (MS1) | Profunda brachii, collateralis ulnaris, circumflexa humeri cranialis and caudalis, brachialis ( | Subclavia | Circumflexa humeri cranialis and caudalis, brachialis | Subclavia | Circumflexa humeri cranialis and caudalis, brachialis |
| Brachialis | Axillary | Profunda brachii, collateralis ulnaris, collateralis ulnaris caudalis part, radialis, ulnaris | Axillary or absent (AV2) | When present is a small branch and emits just radialis and ulnaris (AV2) | Axillary (MS1) | Profunda brachii, collateralis ulnaris, collateralis ulnaris caudalis part, radialis, ulnaris, brachialis superficialis, interossea communis (MS1), recurrens ulnaris dorsalis, cranialis and caudalis interossea, antebrachii superficialis (in | Axillary | Profunda brachii, nutricia humeri ( | Axillary | Profunda brachii, nutricia humeri, collateralis ulnaris, collateralis ulnaris caudalis part, radialis, ulnaris, cranialis and caudalis ulnaris recurrens (as a variant), interossea communis |
| Subscapularis | Axillary from a common trunk that generates other common trunk for circumflexa scapulae, thoracodorsalis and subscapularis | Cranialis and caudalis circumflex humeris, thoracodorsalis | Absent (AV1) | Axillary in a common trunk with circumflexa scapulae in | Cranialis and caudalis circumflex humeris, in | Axillary (Gray, 1918) | Circumflexa scapulae (Gray, 1918) | |||
| Circumflexa humeri cranialis and caudalis | Common trunk with other trunk for circumflexa scapulae, thoracodorsalis and subscapularis | Cranialis and caudalis circumflexa humeri | Axillary, radialis, in common with other arteries from a bigger trunk (AV2) | Cranialis and caudalis circumflexa humeri (AV2) | Axillary ( | Cranialis and caudalis circumflexa humeri ( | Axillary, a common trunk with the profunda brachii ( | Cranialis and caudalis circumflexa humeri, profunda brachii ( | Axillary | Cranialis and caudalis circumflexa humeri |
| Profunda brachii | Brachialis, circumflexa humeris (for one case) | Collateralis radialis | Ulnaris (AV2) | Collateralis radialis (AV2) | Axillary or brachialis (MS1) | Collateralis ulnaris, collateralis radialis, collateralis media (MS1) | Axillary, brachialis (2/3 | Collateralis radialis, collateralis media (MS1) | Brachialis | Collateralis radialis (MS1) |
| Collateralis ulnaris | Brachialis | Radialis directly or in a common trunk with collateralis ulnaris caudalis part, ulnaris (less frequently) (AV2) | Rete articulare cubit (AV2) | Axillary ( | Brachialis (African apes), profunda brachii (Asian apes) | Brachialis, profunda brachii (as variant) | ||||
| Caudalis part of the collateralis ulnaris | Brachialis | Radialis directly or in a common trunk with collateralis ulnaris, ulnaris (less frequently) (AV2) | Rete articulare cubit (AV2) | Brachialis or radialis (brachialis superficial) (MS1) | Brachialis | Brachialis | ||||
| Radialis | Brachialis | Recurrens radialis, interossea communis together with ulnaris, carpeus dorsalis, princeps pollicis, radialis index, arcus palmaris superficialis | Axillary, brachialis (less frequently) (AV2) | Collateralis ulnaris, recurrens radialis (AV2), carpeus dorsalis, (AV3) | Brachialis (MS1) | Recurrens radialis, ramus dorsalis (emits carpeus dorsalis and metacarpae dorsalis and perforans branches, index and ramus palmaris (emits the ramus palmaris superficialis to the arcus palmaris superficialis) (MS2) | Brachial | Dorsalis pollicis ( | Brachial | Recurrens radialis, recurrens palmaris, palmaris superficialis, carpeus dorsalis, princeps pollicis, |
| Ulnaris | Brachial | Recurrens ulnaris, interossea communis interossea together radialis, arcus palmaris superficialis, ramus carpeus palmaris | Axillary, brachial (less frequently) (AV2) | Collateralis ulnaris (occasionally), collateralis media, collateralis radialis (AV2), interossea communis, recorrens ulnaris, arcus palmaris superficialis, princeps pollicis (AV3) | Brachialis (MS1) | Arcus palmaris superficialis, fine ramus carpeus palmaris, carpeus dorsalis ( | Brachialis | Dorsalis for the pollicis ( | Brachialis | Interossea communis, carpeus dorsalis, ramus carpeus palmaris, profundus and superficialis arcus palmaris |
| Arcus palmaris profundus | Absent | Absent | Absent [AV3] | Absent (MS2) | Very fine in | Metacarpae palmaris ( | Arcus palmaris profundus of the ulnaris, completed by the radialis | Metacarpae palmaris | ||
| Arcus palmaris superficialis | Part from ulnaris and part from radialis | Metacarpae palmaris | Ulnaris (AV3) | Digitalis palmaris communis (AV3) | Ulnaris (smaller branch) and radialis (MS2) | Metacarpae palmaris, digitalis palmaris communis, princeps pollicis (MS2) | Ulnaris, ramus palmaris superficialis of the radialis, princeps pollicis (1/2 | Digitalis palmaris communis | Ulnaris, completed by the palmaris superficialis ramus of the radialis, princeps pollicis (rare variation) | Digitalis palmaris communis |
Figure 1Medial view of the shoulder and proximal part of the arm in Macaca fuscata. (a) Common pattern found in M. fuscata. (b) A variation of the distribution of the proximal arteries in the arm. The main difference is the origin of the profunda brachii from the brachial in (a) and from the common circumflexa humeri artery in (b). (c) A variation of the collateralis radialis artery; originates from the profunda brachii artery in (a) and from the brachialis artery in (c). (1) Axillary artery; (2) Circumflexa humeri communis, subscapularis, circumflexa scapulae, and thoracodorsalis; (3) Common trunk for the subscapularis, circumflexa scapulae, and thoracodorsalis; (4) Circumflexa humeri communis; (5) Thoracodorsalis; (6) Circumflexa scapulae; (7) Subscapularis; (8) Circumflexa humeri cranialis; (9) Profunda brachii; (10) Brachialis; (11) Collateralis ulnaris; (12) Collateralis radialis, white arrow indicates the same artery of 12, but with normal origin from the brachialis artery, ∗ muscular branch. The head black arrow indicates the circumflexa humeri caudalis. Name of muscles: (I) Coracobrachialis, (II) Biceps brachii caput brevis, (III) Triceps brachii caput mediale, (IV) Teres major, (V) Tendon of latissimus dorsi, (VI) Subscapularis.
Figure 2Schema of the common arterial pattern in the thoracic limb of Macaca fuscata. (1) Axillary artery; (2) Subscapularis artery and its branches: interossea communis, subscapularis, circumflexa scapulae, and thoracodorsalis; (3) Common trunk for subscapularis, circumflexa scapulae, and thoracodorsalis; (4) Common circumflexa humeri; (5) Thoracodorsalis; (6) Circumflexa scapulae; (7) Subscapularis continuation; (8) Circumflexa humeri cranialis; (9) Profunda brachii; (10) Brachialis; (11) Collateralis ulnaris; (13) Radialis; (14) Ulnaris; (15) Recurrens ulnaris; (16) Recurrens radialis; (17) Interossea communis; (25) Arcus palmaris superficialis; (26) Princeps pollicis; (∆) Digitales communis arteries; (27) Collateralis ulnaris; (28) Interossea cranialis; (29) Interossea caudalis. An arrow indicates the circumflexa humeri caudalis.
Figure 3Medial view of the right elbow in Macaca fuscata. (13) Radialis artery, (14) Ulnaris artery, (15) Recurrens ulnaris, (16) Recurrens radialis, (17) Interossea communis, (17a) contribution from radialis artery, (17b) contribution from ulnaris artery. Muscles: (I) Tendon of brachialis, (II) Biceps brachii, (III) Triceps brachii caput mediale, (VII) Flexor carpi ulnaris, (VIII) Brachioradialis, (ø) median nerve.
Figure 4Caudal view of the distal forearm in Macaca fuscata, right forelimb. (18) Superficial branch of the radialis artery, (19) Deep branch of the radialis artery, (20) Ulnaris artery profundus ramus, (21) Superficial branch of the ulnaris artery. Muscles: (IX) Brachioradialis, (X) Tendon of palmaris longus. (XI) Flexor carpi ulnaris tendo, (XII) Flexor digitorum superficialis, (XIII) Flexor carpi ulnaris tendon.
Figure 5Medial view of the carpus in Macaca fuscata. (22) Ramus carpeus dorsalis of the radialis artery, (α) Metacarpae dorsalis branches. Muscles: (XIII) Interossei (digitis II), (XIV) Extensor digiti I.
Figure 6Dorsal view of the metacarpal region in Macaca fuscata. (22) Ramus carpeus dorsalis of the radialis artery, (23) Arcus metacarpae arch for radialis artery, (24) Arcus metacarpae from ulnaris artery, (α) Metacarpae dorsalis branches. Muscles: (XV) Extensor carpi radialis brevis, (XVI) Extensor digitorum communis tendon.
Figure 7Palmar of the left hand of Macaca fuscata. (18) Ulnaris artery, (21) Radialis artery superficial ramus, (25) Arcus palmaris superficialis, (26) Princeps pollicis artery, (∆) Digitales communis arteries, (†) Communicating branches. Muscles: (ß) Interossei, (XVI) Abductor digiti I.
Figure 8Schema of the arterial pattern in the right thoracic limbs in terms of division of the brachial artery and the number of the palmar arches.
Differences among the ancient and modern nomenclature for some arteries of the Primates' arm.
| Primates | Nomenclature | |
|---|---|---|
|
| Former | Modern [ |
| Brachialis superficial | Radialis | |
| Collateralis Radialis | Profunda Brachii | |
| Profunda Brachii | Ulnaris | |