It is located on both sides of the neck.
The left and right corotid arteries and the vertebral arteries which join together to form the basilar artery (forming the circle of willis).
There is no redial artery in the body.
it is located in the heart
where is the arcuate delta located
Do you mean the "Celiac artery"? if so, its an artery that originates from the abdominal aorta just below the diaphragm and branches into the left gastric artery and the common hepatic artery and the splenic artery.
I have had a totally blocked innominate artery fo over five years. My blood suply to the right side comes from the left corotid artery...through the 'circle of willis' and reverse flows down the right corotid and subclavian. How this affects me is not noticable and not really known.
The left and right corotid arteries and the vertebral arteries which join together to form the basilar artery (forming the circle of willis).
The femoral artery.
There is no redial artery in the body.
it is located in the heart
where is the arcuate delta located
Do you mean the "Celiac artery"? if so, its an artery that originates from the abdominal aorta just below the diaphragm and branches into the left gastric artery and the common hepatic artery and the splenic artery.
Temporal pulse or temporal artery is the artery located directly behind the ear. It is the major artery of the cranium.
The brachial artery is the continuation of the axillary artery. At the elbow it then divides into the radial and ulnar arteries.
forarm
The neck pulse is the corotid pulse; the wrist pulse is the radial pulse; the arm pulse is the brachial pulse. it seems that the pulses are named according to the artery palpated; therefore, your thumb pulse must be your princeps pollicis pulse. this is an educated guess.
behind the knee