If either the jugular vein or the carotid artery is completely severed, the venous tissue will retract and will be extremely difficult, if not impossible to repair.
No. Stop the bleeding first, although death is almost certain and very quick if the jugular vein is severed.
If you mean "jugular vein," then, no... it would not be good to cut it. The jugular veins are in the neck and drain blood from the head. Is it good to cut your "juggler vein"? Only if you want to get rid of someone who is annoying you by juggling flaming bowling pins and oranges.
yes, but you need to be there quick
Jugular vein
internal jugular!
well, if you place 2 fingers at the back of your jaw by your ear, apply a bit of pressure, and you will feel your jugular vein. so in order to cut your jugular vein, u basically have to apply enough pressure to cut through skin, and a little bit more. Just recently (today) i had gotten a skate in the neck and blood started coming out, turns out i didnt cut my jugular tho, i was about an inch away.
there is little chance of survival from the puncture of the jugular vein, because of the amount of blood carried. if punctured death can happen very rapidly. when archduke Franz Ferdinand was assinated in 1914 it was the bullet puncturing the jugular that killed him. also as an extra piece of information if the jugular vein is visible this can be a sign of congestive heart failure.
Which of the following is a jugular vein? 1. The knee cap 2. The jugular vein 3. The hair 4. Left arm
subclavian vein
AnswerIt's called the carotid vein. Veins carry blood towards the heart and arteries carry it away. The vein that carries deoxygenated blood to the heart from the upper body is called the superior vena cava and the vein that carries blood from the head to that vein through the neck is the jugular vein.
The internal jugular vein is formed from the sigmoid sinus (after receiving the lesser petrosal sinus) just after passing through the jugular foramen to become the internal jugular vein.
In humans there is one external and one internal jugular vein. The internal jugular vein is much larger (about twice the diameter) of the external jugular. In the cat there are a pair of each vein but the external jugular vein is about twce as large as the internal. (Opposite of humans.)