hepatic
In human anatomy, the hepatic veins are the veinsthat drain de-oxygenated blood from the liverinto the inferior vena cava.
Arteries drain (pump blood) into veins. Veins drain into your lungs and heart to be re-oxygenated. (This is not true for veins and arteries to and from your lungs.)
renal veins
The right and left hepatic veins.
drain into the Azygos vein.
The radial and ulnar veins.
The deep veins that drain the forearm are the radial veins and ulnar veins. These veins run alongside the radial and ulnar arteries respectively, and eventually join to form the brachial veins. The brachial veins then merge to form the axillary vein, which continues the drainage pathway.
drain blood from the interlobular veins, and empty into theinterlobar veins
The hepatic veins are blood vessels located in the liver. ... Trauma: Injury to the hepatic veins can lead to blood clot formation
superior and inferior vena cava
Those are the veins that drain blood from the lungs, and empty into the left atria.
Blood is drained from the liver through the hepatic veins, specifically the right, left, and middle hepatic veins. These veins collect oxygen-depleted blood from the liver and transport it to the inferior vena cava, which then carries the blood back to the heart for re-oxygenation.