SEARCH
🇬🇧
MEM
O
RY
.COM
4.37.48
Guest
Log In
Â
Homepage
0
0
0
0
0
Create Course
Courses
Last Played
Dashboard
Notifications
Classrooms
Folders
Exams
Custom Exams
Help
Leaderboard
Shop
Awards
Forum
Friends
Subjects
Dark mode
User ID: 999999
Version: 4.37.48
www.memory.com
You are in browse mode. You must login to use
MEM
O
RY
  Log in to start
Index
 »Â
Blood Vessels of the Head and Neck
 »Â
Chapter 1
 »Â
Identification
level: Identification
Questions and Answers List
Identify what is being asked.
level questions: Identification
Question
Answer
It is a small tributary that arises mainly in the skin of the inferior eyelid and terminates in the infraorbital vein or deep facial vein.
Malar vein
It communicates with the ventral side of the facial vein.
Infraorbital vein
It is a small tributary from the commissure of the lips that enters the facial vein caudal to the commissure.
Angular vein of the mouth
It begins on the dorsolateral surface of the muzzle.
Facial vein
This is received by the internal jugular vein caudally to the larynx.
Cranial thyroid vein
This frequently received by the internal jugular vein which comes from the caudal pole of the thyroid lobes.
Middle thyroid vein
This arch is a constant large, unpaired vein which lies ventral to the basihyoid bone.
Hyoid venosus arch
It is called a satellite of the like-named artery.
Cranial laryngeal vein
This contain immune cells that can help fight infection by attacking and destroying germs that are carried in through the lymph fluid.
Lymph nodes
It is a venous plexus of considerable size, and is situated between the temporalis muscle and lateral pterygoid muscle.
Pterygoid plexus
This lies directly deep to the skin and is commonly used for venipuncture in dogs that are too small for the procedure.
External jugular vein
It passes through the rostral thyroid notch.
Cranial laryngeal nerve and Laryngeal artery
It is what innervates the internal branch of the cranial laryngeal.
Mucosa
It is formed by the joining of the caudally coursing external jugular and medially coursing subclavian vein.
Brachiocephalic vein
It contains a valve at its termination.
Linguofacial vein
It is formed in the tympanoccipital fissure by the confluence of the ventral petrosal and sigmoid sinuses.
Internal jugular vein
It arises from the deep surfaces of the sternothyroid muscle.
Caudal thyroid vein
It is unpaired and its termination is in the middle of the ventral surface of the cranial vena cava.
Internal thoracic vein
An unpaired vessel that was formerly called the "precava".
Cranial vena cava
Begins ventral to the alar canal by the continuation and a consolidation of the extension of the ophthalmic plexus.
Maxillary vein
The external jugular usually receives this vein.
Superficial cervical vein
The hyoid venous arch receive this vein.
Submental vein
This vein is the only large superficial vein of the thoracic limb.
Cephalic vein
It is an unpaired vein which arises from the deep surfaces of the sternothyrohyoid muscles.
Caudal thyroid vein
It is a branch of the pterygopalatine ganglion that carries both general sensory fibers from the maxillary nerve and parasympathetic fibers from the nerve of the pterygoid canal.
Major palatine
It is the termination of the facial artery and ramifies on the cheek and nose.
Superior labial artery
It is usually the largest collateral branch of the external carotid artery.
Lingual artery
This nerve branches from the spinal nerve just after it enters the intervertebral foramina.
Ramus Communicans