1.) the arterial system has one of these; the venous system has two - D.) brachiocephalic
2.) these arteries supply the myocardium - I.) coronary
3.) two paired arteries serving the brain - G.) common cartoid, and Z.) vertebral
4.) longest vein in the lower limb - O.) great saphenous
5.) artery on the dorsum of the foot checked after leg surgery - K.) dorsalis pedis
6.) serves the posterior thigh - J.) deep artery of the thigh
7.) supplies the diaphragm - T.) phrenic
8.) formed by the union of the radial and ulnar nerves - C.) brachial
9.) two superficial veins of the arm - B.) basilic and F.) Cephalic
10.) artery serving the kidney - W.) renal
11.) veins draining the liver - P.) hepatic
12.) artery that supplies the distal half of the large intestines - Q.) inferior mesenteric
13.) drains the pelvic organs - S.) internal iliac
14.) what the external iliac artery becomes on entry into the thigh - M.) femoral
15.) major artery serving the arm - X.) subclavian
16.) supplies most of the small intestine - Y.) superior mesenteric
17.) join to form the inferior vena cava - H.) common iliac
18.) an arterial trunk that has three major branches, which run to the liver, spleen, and stomach - E.) celiac trunk
19.) major artery serving the tissues external to the skull - L.) external cartoid
20.) three veins serving the leg - A.) anterior tibial, N.) fibular, and U.) posterior tibial
21.) artery generally used to take the pulse on the wrist - V.) radial
Venous and arterial
The SYSTEMIC CIRCULATION transfers oxygenated blood from a central pump (the heart) to all of the body tissues (systemic arterial system) and returns deoxygenated blood with a high carbon dioxide content from the tissues to the central pump (systemic venous system). The PULMONARY CIRCULATION is where oxygen and carbon dioxide exchange between the blood and alveolar air occurs. The PORTAL CIRCULATION normally is only one capillary bed for each branch of a circuit, however, there are a few instances where there are two capillary beds, one after each other, in series. hope this helps^_^
yes
Capillary blood samples and venous blood samples are both used for hematological tests.
According to Starling's law, an increase in venous return (i.e. increase in preload on the ventricles) results in a more effective contraction, hence augmenting cardiac output, as long as the actin and myosin fibrils in the muscle fibers are not overstretched. In the most simple terms, the more blood the heart collects blood from venous return, the more it is able to distribute through cardiac output. If venous return is poor, cardiac output will be poor- basically like a water pump that is connected to an insufficient supply of water.
brachiocephalic
venous and arterial
Venous and arterial
There are mainly two parts in Cardiovascular system. 1. Heart. & 2.Blood vessels. Blood vessels contains arterial system(aorta-artery-arteriols-capillary) & Venous system (venacava-vein-venules-capillary)
There are mainly two parts in Cardiovascular system. 1. Heart. & 2.Blood vessels. Blood vessels contains arterial system(aorta-artery-arteriols-capillary) & Venous system (venacava-vein-venules-capillary)
on pump and off pump.... another way to classify it is arterial graft (LIMA & RIMA and radial artery) and venous (saphenous vein)
close circulatory system
After the drawing of an arterial sample, the artery should immediately be compressed for a minimum of one minute to two minutes to prevent a hematoma.
There are two different types of blood clots, venous and arterial. The symptoms of venous clots most often occur in the arms and legs, and they include swelling, warmth, redness, and pain. The symptoms of arterial clots include pain or oxygen deprivation, loss of certain bodily functions depending on the location of the clot, paralysis and possible loss of color in the effected area, and possible bloody diarrhea.
venal relating to veins: The circulatory system can be divided into two parts; the arterial system, and the venal system. venal meaning open to bribery /corruption He is too venal to be a good police officer.
Double-lumen PICC lines come in two colors. Red is the blood access lumen or arterial lumen and blue is the blood return lumen or venous lumen. Despite the names, neither lumen is leads to an artery, but both lead into a vein.
In the groin