left ventricle, aortic semilunar valve, ascending aorta, aoric arch, brachiocephalic artery, right subclavian artery, axillary artery, brachial artery, radial/ulnar artery, superficial palmar artery.
medial vein of forearm, radial/cubital vein, basilic vein, brachial vein, axillary vein, subclavian vein, brachiocephalic vein, superior vena cava, heart (right atrium)
"Blood pressure" is the pressure exerted by the blood against the walls of the arteries, maintained by the contraction of the left ventricle, the resistance of the arterioles and capillaries, the elasticity of the arterial walls, and by the viscosity and volume of the blood.
Lacrimal bone (in the face) Lumbar vertibrae (lower back) Lunate bone (wrist) Lateral cuneiform bone (ankle)
no
What goes around comes around
Why can the pulse be felt in certain areas of the body like wrist neck and hollow of the elbow
The buttocks are medial to the wrist. The wrist is lateral to the buttocks.
In anatomical position, it is possible to say the thumb is lateral to the wrist. No other structure could be considered lateral to the wrist.
The fingers are distal to the wrist. The wrist is proximal to the fingers. In anatomical position, it is possible to say the thumb is lateral to the wrist.
No. When the body is in the anatomical position, the thumb is further away from the midline. You say that the thumb is lateral to the ring finger.
A lateral carpal is one of the small bones located in the carpus, or wrist, of the horse. It is also known as the radial carpal bone. The lateral carpal bone articulates with the radius and the third carpal bone (carpometacarpus).
The wrist is distal to the forearm. The wrist is neither medical nor lateral to the forearm.
The elbow is proximal to the wrist. In anatomical position, it is neither medial nor lateral to the wrist.
The bumps at the ankle are the malleoli (singular malleolus). The medial malleolus is formed by the tibia, and the lateral malleolus by the fibula. The medial wrist bump is formed by the styloid process of the ulna, and the lateral wrist bump by the styloid process of the radius.
The wrist and the leg are on different limbs; therefore, you can't describe their relative position with the terms "proximal" and "distal." The wrist is superior and lateral to the leg.
The medial bump of the wrist is called the pisiform bone. It is a small, pea-shaped bone located on the palmar side of the wrist. It serves as an attachment site for some ligaments and muscles of the hand.
No, the wrist is distal to the elbow and the elbow is proximal to the wrist.
The radius forms the bump on the lateral side of the wrist. The ulna forms the bump on the medial side of the wrist. Remember to keep anatomical position in mind when determining directionals for the upper limb.