anterior tibial artery
The anterior tibial artery is the main arterial supply of the anterior compartment of the leg.
Gross anatomy
The anterior tibial artery arises from the popliteal artery in the popliteal fossa and continues distally as the dorsalis pedis artery.
Course
The popliteal artery usually divides at the distal border of the popliteus muscle into the tibioperoneal trunk and anterior tibial artery.
While still in the posterior compartment of the leg, the anterior tibial artery gives off the:
- posterior tibial recurrent artery
- circumflex fibular artery
Subsequently, it passes through a gap above the interosseous membrane into the anterior compartment of the leg. Here it lies on the interosseous membrane, lateral to tibialis anterior muscle.
The anterior tibial artery passes in front of the ankle joint and continues as the dorsalis pedis artery onto the dorsum of the foot lateral to the tendon of the extensor hallucis longus and medial to the extensor digitorum longus and deep peroneal nerve.
Branches
Branches include:
- anterior tibial recurrent artery: arises immediately, passes upward in the tibialis anterior muscle to anastomose with lateral genicular branches (of the popliteal artery) at the knee
- muscular branches
- perforating branches: pass behind extensor digitorum longus, piercing the deep fascia and supplying the skin of the anterior leg
- anterior medial malleolar artery: anastomoses with the medial malleolar branch of the posterior tibial artery
- anterior lateral malleolar artery: anastomoses with the perforating branch of the peroneal artery