Veins carry blood back to the heart, while arteries carry blood away from the heart. Veins have valves to prevent backflow, while arteries do not. Arteries have thicker walls and carry oxygen-rich blood, while veins have thinner walls and carry oxygen-poor blood.
During medical procedures, blood is typically drawn from a vein rather than an artery.
The renal artery carries blood to the kidney, and the renal vein carries blood that has been purified by the kidney.
Pulmonary artery carries deoxygenated blood and appears blue, while pulmonary vein carries oxygenated blood and appears red.
The internal jugular vein The carotid arteries (common and internal) The vagus nerve
The uterine pedicle contains the uterine artery, uterine vein, and uterine ligaments that attach the uterus to surrounding structures. It is an essential structure for providing blood supply and support to the uterus.
one is vein one is artery
arteries 've short lumen where as veins 've large lumen.
You cannot generally take a pulse from a vein.
it is a VEIN <3
Artery.
there is no such animal as an artery vein.... you have artery and you have veins... no vessel is both, unless used in a CABG.
It's a vein. The artery going to your head is the carotid artery.
both are blood ways
your lungs.
segmental artery, renal artery, renal vein, arcule vein, interlobular vein, interlobular artery
You can try to identify the left from the right by looking at the position of the vein, the artery and the urethra. The artery is anterior of the vein and the urethra is pointing downwards.
the wall of an artery is usuallythicker that the wall of a vein.