Collateral circulation
Collateral circulation is the alternate circulation around a blocked artery or vein via another path, such as nearby minor vessels. It may occur via preexisting vascular redundancy, as in the circle of Willis in the brain, or it may occur via new branches formed between adjacent blood vessels, as in the eye after a retinal embolism or in the brain when an instance of arterial constriction occurs due to Moyamoya disease. Its formation may be related by pathological conditions such as high vascular resistance or ischaemia. It is occasionally also known as accessory circulation, auxiliary circulation, or secondary circulation. It has surgically created analogues in which shunts or anastomoses are constructed to bypass circulatory problems.
An example of the usefulness of collateral circulation is a systemic thromboembolism in cats. This is when a thrombotic embolus lodges above the external iliac artery, blocking the external and internal iliac arteries and effectively shutting off all blood supply to the hind leg. Even though the main vessels to the leg are blocked, enough blood can get to the tissues in the leg via the collateral circulation to keep them alive.
Brain
in humans and some other animals is maintained via a network of collateral arteries that anastomose in the circle of Willis, which lies at the base of the brain. In the circle of Willis so-called communicating arteries exist between the front and back parts of the circle of Willis, as well as between the left and right side of the circle of Willis.Leptomeningeal collateral circulation is another anastomosis in the brain.