Common carotid artery

The common carotid artery begins asymmetrically on both sides. The right common carotid artery arises after the brachiocephalic trunk divides into two branches, the other branch being the right subclavian artery. The bifurcation is located approximately at the level of the right sternoclavicular joint.

The left common carotid artery branches directly from the aortic arch. The left common carotid artery usually is longer than the right one.

The common carotid arteries leave the thoracic cavity via the superior thoracic aperture. Both arteries ascend through the neck included in the common carotid sheath together with the following structures:

Together with all the mentioned structures, the common carotid arteries on either side of the neck reach the carotid triangle of the neck. In the neck, the artery is located lateral to the trachea and esophagus.

As the common carotid arteries are magistral blood vessels, usually they don't give off any branches in the neck, but in the carotid triangle at the level of the upper margin of the thyroid cartilage, each common carotid divides into two arteries:

At its bifurcation, the common carotid artery is slightly dilated. This region is known as the carotid sinus, which contains baroreceptors that sense changes in the blood pressure and have an important role in regulating it.