Coronary Arteries: Anatomy, Branches, and Clinical Ischemia
Hacı Mert Gökhan
@hacimertgokhan
Overview
The coronary arteries are the first branches of the aorta, arising from the aortic sinuses just above the aortic valve. They supply the myocardium with oxygenated blood during diastole. Understanding coronary anatomy is fundamental for ECG interpretation, infarct localization, and interventional cardiology.
Left Coronary Artery (LCA)
Also called the left main, it arises from the left aortic sinus and runs between the pulmonary trunk and the left auricle for a short distance (typically 1-2 cm) before bifurcating.
Left Anterior Descending (LAD)
The LAD travels in the anterior interventricular groove toward the apex. It supplies:
- Anterior wall of the left ventricle
- Anterior 2/3 of the interventricular septum
- Anterolateral papillary muscle
- Bundle of His and proximal bundle branches
Branches: Diagonal branches (lateral LV wall) and septal perforators (septal supply).
Left Circumflex (LCx)
Wraps around the left side in the coronary (atrioventricular) groove. In left-dominant circulation, it also gives off the posterior descending artery (PDA). Supplies the lateral and posterolateral LV wall.
Right Coronary Artery (RCA)
Arises from the right aortic sinus, runs in the right AV groove, and supplies:
- Right atrium and right ventricle
- Sinoatrial (SA) node in 60% of people (right-dominant)
- Atrioventricular (AV) node in 80-90% of people
- Inferior wall of LV (via PDA in right-dominant)
- Posterior 1/3 of the interventricular septum
Dominance
Defined by which artery gives rise to the PDA.
- Right-dominant (~70%): RCA → PDA. Most common.
- Left-dominant (~10%): LCx → PDA.
- Co-dominant (~20%): RCA and LCx both contribute.
Clinical Correlation: ECG Localization
- Anterior MI: LAD occlusion → ST elevation V1-V4
- Lateral MI: LCx occlusion → ST elevation I, aVL, V5-V6
- Inferior MI: RCA occlusion (right-dominant) → ST elevation II, III, aVF
- Posterior MI: Often RCA; reciprocal changes V1-V3 (ST depression with tall R waves)
Coronary Dominance & Surgical Significance
Coronary artery bypass grafts (CABG) and percutaneous interventions are planned based on dominance. Right-dominant patients with proximal RCA occlusion are at higher risk for AV node ischemia and bradyarrhythmias.