Left Coronary Artery — Origin, Course, and Branches

The left coronary artery (LCA) is larger than the right coronary artery. It arises from the ascending aorta and runs on the surface of the heart within the subpericardial fibrofatty tissue. It is shorter than the RCA before dividing into its two main branches.

Origin

Arises from the left posterior aortic sinus (left aortic sinus) of the ascending aorta, immediately above the aortic valve.

N.B. No coronary artery arises from the right posterior aortic sinus — this is termed the non-coronary sinus.

Course

SegmentDescription
InitialRuns forwards and to the left between the pulmonary trunk and the left auricle
DivisionEmerges on the surface and divides into two main branches: the anterior interventricular artery and the circumflex artery

Main Branches

1. Anterior Interventricular Artery (AIV) — also called Left Anterior Descending (LAD)

FeatureDetail
CourseDescends in the anterior interventricular sulcus towards the apex
TerminationWinds around the apex and anastomoses with the posterior interventricular branch of the RCA in the posterior interventricular sulcus
SuppliesBoth ventricles and the anterosuperior part of the interventricular septum

2. Circumflex Artery

FeatureDetail
CourseCurves postero-inferiorly with the great cardiac vein in the left anterior coronary sulcus, winds around the left border, continues in the left posterior coronary sulcus
TerminationEnds to the left of the posterior interventricular sulcus; anastomoses with the RCA at the crux (in right-dominant hearts)
SuppliesLeft atrium and left ventricle; gives a left marginal branch to the left (obtuse) margin

Additional Branches

BranchNotes
Left marginal arteryBranch of circumflex; supplies the left margin of the left ventricle up to the apex
Diagonal arteryMay arise from the trunk of the LCA or from the AIV; supplies the anterolateral wall of the left ventricle
Conus arterySupplies the pulmonary conus (infundibulum)
Left atrial branchesSupply the left atrium
SA nodal arteryArises from LCA in ~40% of cases

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