| Literature DB >> 34035873 |
Adil Omer1, Maitham Alkadumi1, Sandhya Jupalli1, Joseph Dobtsis1.
Abstract
Persistent sciatic artery is a direct continuation of the internal iliac artery. It is a rare anatomic variant where the sciatic artery does not regress during fetal development. We present a case of a 43-year-old male with a right leg ulcer who has an incidental finding of persistent sciatic artery on Computed Tomography (CT) of the thigh with Intravenous (IV) contrast to evaluate for abscess formation. A major complication seen in some patients with persistent sciatic artery is aneurysm formation which predispose patients to limb-threatening thromboembolism. Asymptomatic cases such as this case require no intervention apart from follow up.Entities:
Keywords: Aneurysm; Persistent; Sciatic artery
Year: 2021 PMID: 34035873 PMCID: PMC8138860 DOI: 10.1016/j.radcr.2021.03.057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiol Case Rep ISSN: 1930-0433
Fig. 1A 43-year-old male presented with a right leg ulcer.
(1A) through (1D) represent consecutive cross-sectional images with corresponding levels marked on the sagittal plane from the origin of the persistent sciatic artery to mid-thigh in the cranio-caudal direction. The green arrow follows the External Iliac artery, common femoral artery, and the superficial femoral artery. The red arrow follows the internal iliac artery as it continues as the persistent sciatic artery.
Fig. 2A 43-year-old male presented with a right leg ulcer.
Findings: (1A) is a CTA 3D reconstruction of the right lower extremity demonstrating the normal anatomy of the common femoral artery, superficial femoral artery, and its distal continuation as the popliteal artery provided for comparison (arrow head). (1B) and (1C) 3D reconstruction of CT of the right femur with contrast demonstrating persistent sciatic artery with hypoplastic superficial femoral artery.
Types of persistent sciatic artery.
| PSA origin | PSA | SFA | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Type 1 | Internal iliac artery | Fully developed | Fully developed |
| Type 2 | internal iliac artery | Fully developed | Partially developed in Type 2a and absent in Type 2b |
| Type 3 | internal iliac artery | Partially developed; proximally | Fully developed |
| Type 4 | internal iliac artery | Partially developed; distally | Fully developed |
| Type 5 | median sacral artery | fully developed | fully developed in type 5a and type 5b undeveloped |
Summary table.
| Etiology | Embryological defect causing failure of sciatic artery regression |
| Incidence | 0.025%-0.04% |
| Gender ratio | 0.56: 0.44 female to male |
| Age predilection | 57 |
| Risk factors | None identified |
| Treatment | Follow up for asymptomatic cases. Aneurysmal percutaneous stenting or ligation |
| Prognosis | 44% of PSA cases develop aneurysm |
| Findings on imaging | persistent posterior sciatic artery |