varicous veins..
the names of the upper and lower leg is; your mum's minge = top your dad's man boobs = bottom
Henry Vernon Crock has written: 'The blood supply of the lower limb bones in man' -- subject(s): Blood-vessels, Bones, Leg
Harold Daintree Johnson has written: 'The swollen leg' -- subject(s): Blood Vessels, Blood-vessels, Diseases, Edema, Leg, Surgery
Margaret C. Conrad has written: 'Functional anatomy of the circulation to the lower extremities' -- subject(s): Blood-vessels, Leg
The blood vessels in a chicken leg are found on the back of the chicken skin, really easy to tell when the chicken is raw. They are thin, small red lines all over the skin.
The great saphenous vein is the major superficial vein of the medial leg and thigh. It is the longest vein in the human body, extending from the top of the foot to the upper thigh and groin.
Femur in upper leg then fibula and tibia in lower leg
The indentation that is left in the lower leg is due to edema, or fluid settling in the tissues. Most of the time, the build up of fluid left in the tissues is because the blood is backing up from the heart, and allowing the fluid portion of the blood to settle from the bloodvessels into the surrounding tissue. This fluid backing up in the blood vessels can be due to Congestive heart failure.
Harold Dodd has written: 'The pathology and surgery of the veins of the lower limb' -- subject(s): Blood Vessels, Diseases, Leg, Surgery, Thromboembolism, Varicose veins, Vascular Diseases, Veins
weird and kind of gross
The most advisable action is to consult an angiologist, a medicine doctor specialized on blood circulation issues. You should take a lab test for cholesterol levels. Another important exam is to get an angiography to analyze the condition of your leg's vessels, as well of your entire body's blood vessels. Convenient diets may be necessary to avoid the worsening of your situation, and medications prescribed by the doctor certainly will solve your problem. But you have to do it the soonest.
The most common risk of the surgery is infection.Rarely, the surgery damages nerves in the lower back or major blood vessels in front of the disk. Occasionally, there may be some residual paralysis of a leg or bladder muscle.