The present study was carried out on 30 cadavers (5 fresh, 30 pre served ad
ult and 5 fresh stillborn) following injection of red latex through the sub
clavian and common iliac arteries. The blood supply to the peripheral nerve
s was studied in general, together with the vascular pedicles to the ulnar,
saphenous, sural, deep and superficial peroneal nerves, and the superficia
l branch of the radial nerve. The nutrient arteries supplying the periphera
l nerves came from either the adjacent axial artery or the fasciocutaneous
or muscular arteries. They formed anastomotic channels in the epineurium an
d penetrated it to form a continuous longitudinal artery. Based on the pres
ence of absence of dominant arterial pedicles, five patterns of blood-suppl
y to the nerves could be identified. I: no dominant arterial pedicle; II: o
nly one dominant artery (e.g. artery with a diameter more than 0.8 mm and a
ccompanying the nerve for most of its length); III: only one dominant vesse
l that divided into ascending and descending branches to supply the nerve;
IV: multiple dominant pedicles; V: multiple dominant arterial pedicles form
ing a continuous artery that accompanied the nerve. The arterial pedicles t
o the ulnar, saphenous and deep peroneal nerves and the superficial branch
of the radial n. had mean diameters of over 0.8 mm, thus being suitable for
microvascular anastomosis. Those to the sural nerve were not present in tw
o thirds of the dissected cadavers. In 10% of the cadavers the superficial
peroneal nerve had an arterial pedicle that accompanied the nerve for less
than two cm with a mean diameter less than 0.8 mm. The ulnar nerve could be
very suitable as a donor vascularized nerve graft as it had a dominant vas
cular pedicle in all the cases studied; however, its use should be restrict
ed to Cs and T1 root damage of the brachial plexus. The superficial branch
of the radial n. might be suitable for vascularized nerve grafting, but thi
s is difficult in practice since the radial artery is a major limb artery.
The saphenous nerve had a dominant arterial pedicles in all the cadavers di
ssected and could be the most suitable as a donor vascularized nerve graft,
unlike the sural nerve which did not have a dominant arterial pedicle in t
wo-thirds of the specimens. The deep and superficial peroneal nerves may al
so be unsuitable since the former is accompanied by a major limb vessel whi
le the latter had a dominant vascular pedicle that accompanied the nerve fo
r only a short distance in 10% of the dissected cadavers.