yup. According to my ultrasound tech I'm one of the lucky 35-40% of the population with this "normal" deviation.
The two major veins which drain the leg are 1) the femoral vein, and 2) the saphenous vein.
My mum has two femoral arteries in her right leg and one in the left.
Yes, one in each leg. Or in some very rare cases two in one leg and one in the other making three.
Tibia in lower leg. Femur in upper leg. So tibial or femoral.
The most important veins in the lower leg are the two saphenous veins--the greater saphenous vein, which runs from the foot to the groin area, and the short saphenous vein, which runs from the ankle to the knee.
The major artery of the thigh is the Femoral artery and runs through the muscles, from the groin down the inner leg. It is approximately 4cm in length then it divides into two branches. The superficial femoral artery and the profunda femoris artery, which is closer to the femur that the femoral artery. The femoral artery does not leave the thigh and is aproximately 9 1/2 inches from groin to just above the knee.
Femoral Femoral
Bleeding for a major artery can cause death within a few minutes. The carotid artery in the neck and the femoral artery in the leg are two major arteries.
A person with one leg has to buy two shoes but they get a 50% discount.
Femoral and carotid
Sorry, but it is impossible to get 220v (240) from one leg, it has to be two legs as each leg is 120v.
Is'intthere two? the left gonadal vein drains into the leftrenal vein, and the right drains directly into theinferior vena cava.-sourceWikipedia.