Mobilisation of the latissimus dorsi muscle as a functional
graft necessarily involves division of perforating
arteries that enter the distal portion of the muscle, rendering
it vulnerable to ischaemic damage when the
muscle is stimulated electrically. Using a fluorescent microsphere
technique we showed that the blood flow
contributed by the thoracodorsal artery decreases in a
proximal-to-distal direction, and that of the
perforating arteries in a distal-to-proximal direction, but
for neither does the flow decline to zero. This is
consistent with earlier reports of anastomotic connections
between the 2 arterial territories. We went on to
use fluorescence microscopy to demonstrate the existence of
these vascular anastomoses, the first such
evidence obtained under physiological conditions of pressure
and flow. In clinical applications, the existence
of anastomotic connections offers the prospect of maintaining
flow to the distal part of the grafted muscle
without the delays inherent in neovascularisation procedures.