Atieh Seyedian Moghaddam, Stefan H Geyer, Theresia Stigger, Lukas F Reissig, Wolfgang J Weninger
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The dermal arteries of the finger are organized in discrete units. We hypothesized that the anatomy of the dermal arterial units and the number and complexity of dermal Sucquet-Hoyer canals (SHCs) differ between the tip and center of the pad of the thumb. To test this, digital HREM volume datasets (voxel dimensions of 1-3 μm³) were created from biopsies harvested from the thumb tip and pad of six body donors. They were analyzed using virtual sectioning and three-dimensional (3D) surface and volume models. In the tip samples, two to six arteries entered the dermis via a square of 4 mm2 of the dermo-hypodermal junction. They supplied 1.16 mm2 surface and connected to ∼5.5 SHCs. Conversely, in 50% of pad samples, no dermal artery entered via the dermo-hypodermal junction. In the remaining 50%, one or two arteries supplied an average surface of 2.08 mm2 and fed ∼2.5 SHCs. SHC tortuosity and the number of arterio-arterial bridge anastomoses were similar in the tip and pad. Our results support the concept of discrete dermal arterial units. The differences in the dermal microanatomy between the thumb's tip and pad are of particular significance, since they may reflect distinct functional requirements and different reactions to injury and pathogens.
期刊介绍:
Microscopy and Microanalysis publishes original research papers in the fields of microscopy, imaging, and compositional analysis. This distinguished international forum is intended for microscopists in both biology and materials science. The journal provides significant articles that describe new and existing techniques and instrumentation, as well as the applications of these to the imaging and analysis of microstructure. Microscopy and Microanalysis also includes review articles, letters to the editor, and book reviews.