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Ulnar artery

Ulnar artery
Gray1237.svg
Palm of (corrected) right hand, showing position of skin creases and bones, and surface markings for the volar arches.
Gray1235.png
Front of right upper extremity, showing surface markings for bones, arteries, and nerves.
Details
Source Brachial artery
Branches Anterior ulnar recurrent artery
posterior ulnar recurrent artery
common interosseous artery (volar, dorsal)
muscular artery
volar carpal
dorsal carpal
deep volar
superficial volar arch
Vein Ulnar vein
Identifiers
Latin Arteria Ulnaris
MeSH A07.231.114.920
TA A12.2.09.041
FMA 22796
Anatomical terminology
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The ulnar artery is the main blood vessel, with oxygenated blood, of the medial aspect of the forearm. It arises from the brachial artery and terminates in the superficial palmar arch, which joins with the superficial branch of the radial artery. It is palpable on the anterior and medial aspect of the wrist.

Along its course, it is accompanied by a similarly named vein or veins, the ulnar vein or ulnar veins.

The ulnar artery, the larger of the two terminal branches of the brachial, begins a little below the bend of the elbow in the cubital fossa, and, passing obliquely downward, reaches the ulnar side of the forearm at a point about midway between the elbow and the wrist. It then runs along the ulnar border to the wrist, crosses the transverse carpal ligament on the radial side of the pisiform bone, and immediately beyond this bone divides into two branches, which enter into the formation of the superficial and deep volar arches.

Forearm: Anterior ulnar recurrent artery, Posterior ulnar recurrent artery, Common interosseous is very short around 1 cm and gives rise to both the anterior and posterior interosseous arteries and Close to the wrist it gives off the palmar carpal branch which is the ulnar contribution to the palmar carpal arch and it also gives a dorsal carpal branch which is the ulnar contribution to dorsal carpal arch


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