The antecubital space is proximal to the carpal region. ( antecubital space being the opposite side of the elbow and the carpal region being the wrist )
Your wenis (no, really, I heard that from my science teacher)(and she said its another name for your back of your elbow"so its call your wenis!
It's ANTEcubital. It means the anterior portion of the elbow (inside, front, elbow pit) :)
The most common sites are the Median Cubital and Cephalic Veins although other sites may be used. *(this next part was already here and may be wrong; the above is what I found in my textbook)* - The best advice is to start low and work your way up (ie start with the top of the hand, and use the antecubital area inside the elbow if the hand veins become inaccessible.
The back of the hand, i.e. not the palm, is called the Dorsum. The same word is used to refer to the top of the foot, i.e. not the sole. Incorrect to reffer to the dorsum of the foot as the back as it is clearly continuous with the front of the leg.Well, ^ is technically correct. The back of your hand is called a dorsum. But that's not the name. If you look up dorsum, it just tells you its the dorsal part of the structure. The actualnamed part of the back of the hand is the opisthenard
A nevus in the antecubital area is a mole on the inside of the elbow.
The antecubital space is proximal to the carpal region. ( antecubital space being the opposite side of the elbow and the carpal region being the wrist )
antecubital...not "wenis"Antecubital region
It's actually the "antecubital" area or region.
The Superficial Vein is not an antecubital vein.
the antecubital space
The scientific name for the elbow crease is the antecubital fossa.
distal
the brachial pulse
Gafhssfydad
Since this is in the Health topic I will answer on what I think your question is...Antecubital means before or in front of the elbow. The little depression in the bend or "crook" of your elbow is called the antecubital fossa.
brachial, antecubital, carpal