Bronchial artery

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Bronchial artery
Gray1032.png
Bronchial artery labeled at center right
Details
Latin Arteriae bronchiales,
rami bronchiales partis thoracicae aortae
Source Thoracic aorta
Bronchial veins
Supplies Lungs
Identifiers
Dorlands
/Elsevier
r_02/12689141
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TE {{#property:P1693}}
FMA {{#property:P1402}}
Anatomical terminology
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In human anatomy, the bronchial arteries supply the lungs with nutrition and oxygenated blood. Although there is much variation, there are usually two bronchial arteries that run to the left lung, and one to the right lung.

Origin

The left bronchial arteries (superior & inferior) usually arise directly from the thoracic aorta.

The single right bronchial artery usually arises from one of the following:

Distribution to lung

The bronchial arteries supply blood to the bronchi and connective tissue of the lungs. They travel with and branch with the bronchi, ending about at the level of the respiratory bronchioles. They anastomose with the branches of the pulmonary arteries, and together, they supply the visceral pleura of the lung in the process.

Note that much of the deoxygenated blood supplied by the bronchial arteries is returned via the pulmonary veins rather than the bronchial veins. As a consequence, blood returning to the left heart is slightly less oxygenated than blood found at the level of the pulmonary capillary beds.

Each bronchial artery also has a branch that supplies the esophagus.

Comparison with pulmonary arteries

It is easy to confuse the bronchial arteries with the pulmonary arteries, because they both supply the lungs with blood, but there are important differences:

artery function circulation diameter
pulmonary arteries supplies deoxygenated blood pumped from the right ventricle pulmonary circulation relatively large
bronchial arteries supplies oxygenated blood pumped from the left ventricle systemic circulation relatively small

Clinical relevance

The bronchial arteries are typically enlarged and tortuous in chronic pulmonary thromboembolic hypertension.[1]

With modern surgical techniques, bronchial anastomoses heal well without bronchial artery reconnection. Largely for this reason, bronchial artery circulation is usually sacrificed during lung transplants, instead relying on the persistence of a microcirculation presumably arising from the deoxygenated pulmonary circulation to provide perfusion to the airways. [2]

Aneurysms of the bronchial artery may mimic aortic aneurysms.[3]

See also

References

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  2. Nowak et al. Bronchial Artery Revascularization affects Graft Recovery after Lung Transplant. AJRCCM Vol 165. Number 2, Jan 2002
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External links