# Anatomical characterisation of an additional atrioventricular node artery contributing to the arterial complex of proximal conduction components: Bonapace’s septal branch or Kugel’s collateral artery

**Authors:** Tomokazu Kawashima

PMC · DOI: 10.1136/openhrt-2025-003520 · 2025-09-11

## TL;DR

This study identifies an additional artery supplying the heart's conduction system, which could help explain and prevent iatrogenic conduction disturbances.

## Contribution

The study provides new anatomical insights into an additional descending atrioventricular node artery and its role in the arterial complex of proximal conduction components.

## Key findings

- An additional descending AVN artery was observed in 22.4% of cases macroscopically and 35.7% histologically.
- The additional artery often originates from a common trunk with the SN artery and Bachmann’s bundle branches.
- This arterial complex may serve as a collateral route during coronary occlusion.

## Abstract

Transient or permanent iatrogenic conduction disturbances from injury to arteries supplying the cardiac conduction system (CCS) have increased. A more comprehensive understanding of CCS arterial anatomy is essential for advancing electrophysiological studies. Compared with the sinus node (SN) artery, atrioventricular node (AVN) artery is more variable and difficult to identify because of the thicker surrounding myocardium. Arterial sources other than the main AVN artery branching near the cardiac crux—such as the Bonapace’s septal branch or Kugel’s collateral artery—have often been overlooked or regarded as atypical and remain poorly characterised.

An alternative origin and course of the AVN artery were examined in 116 hearts via microdissection and in 14 additional hearts using serial histological sections of physiologically aged hearts without coronary artery occlusion.

An additional descending AVN artery was observed in 22.4% of cases and an interatrial septal branch extending to Koch’s triangle was found in 11.2% based on the macroscopic analysis—findings aligning well with the histologically verified incidence of 35.7%. These results suggest that approximately one-third of individuals exhibit an additional descending AVN artery with features resembling the normal Bonapace’s septal branch. Notably, this additional artery originates from a common trunk with the SN artery and Bachmann’s bundle branches, forming an arterial complex supplying the proximal conduction components.

Using a large sample size, our findings highlight the anatomical and clinical importance of the arterial complex supplying the proximal conduction components, including the additional descending AVN artery. This arterial complex may include the Bonapace’s septal branch and serve as a Kugel’s collateral route in coronary occlusion. This characterisation provides basic essential anatomical data to support future research on iatrogenic conduction disturbances.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** coronary artery occlusion (MESH:D054059), injury to arteries (MESH:D057772)

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12519343/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12519343