We do not know, but if they are larger than about the diameter of a nickel, you should see a doctor. Do not pop them. That can lead to infection, and blisters expose a lot of tissue to infection when deflated. If they break on their own, avoid spreading the liquid around. Wipe the area with alcohol and cover it with a clean bandage until you can get medical attention. It is most likely that you have been exposed to a caustic material or something that you are seriously allergic to, like poison ivy.
If it is below the inner thigh, it has to be the lower leg and if about the knee is the thigh, itself. There is no name for what you described.
your thigh is the part above the knee the leg part is below the knee hope I helped
your thigh is the part above the knee the leg part is below the knee hope I helped
The gracilis muscle lies on the inner thigh, connecting from the lower portion of your pubic bone to the upper inner surface of your knee bone. The Sartorius muscle connects from the upper portion of your pubic bone and wraps around the thigh and connecting to the inner portion of the knee.
Your quad (quadracep) muscle is on the front of your thigh, the front of the leg above the knee.
You call this region as thigh only in anatomical language.
Nine. Front: Gracilis (inner thigh), Adductor magnus (below Gracilis), Sartorius, Quadriceps femoris (above knee), Tibialis anterior, Back:Peroneous longus (outer caf), Soleus, Gastronemius (inner caf), and Biceps femoris.
No, the femur is the thigh bone, in the upper part of the leg, above the knee.
Doing squats help alot, and lunges :)
The quadriceps extends the thigh and the hamstring muscles flex the knee
It is the biggest bone in the human body situated in the thigh.
The femur is the largest bone in the body; it's your "thigh bone", above the knee attaching to the hip.