Main Model


Anterior interventricular branch

The left coronary artery divides into two branches, the anterior interventricular branch (clinicians continue to use LAD, the abbreviation for the former term “left anterior descending” artery) and the circumflex branch.

 

The anterior interventricular branch passes along the interventricular groove to the apex of the heart. Here, it turns around the inferior border of the heart and commonly anastomoses with the posterior interventricular branch of the right coronary artery. The anterior interventricularbranch supplies adjacent parts of both ventricles and via interventricular septal branches, the anterior two thirds of the interventricular septum. In many people, the anteriorinterventricular branch gives rise to a lateral branch (diagonal artery), which descends on the anterior surface of the heart.