BIOL 205 Lecture Notes - Lecture 19: Anterior Communicating Artery, External Carotid Artery, Internal Carotid Artery

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13 Sep 2016
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Cerebral arterial circle (circle of willis an anastomosis of cranial arteries) aortic arch left subclavian a. Posterior communicating: internal carotid a. If r. anterior is blocked: r. vertebral basilar a. L. posterior cerebral l. posterior communicating a. L. internal carotid l. anterior cerebral anterior communicating artery. Systemic circulation: consists of arteries and veins that travel to and from all parts of the body except the lungs. General arterial flow out of the heart: oxygenated blood is pumped out of left ventricle into ascending aorta, from which two branches emerge: Right coronary artery: three arterial branches emerge from the aortic arch: Brachiocephalic trunk, which bifurcates into right common carotid and right subclavian arteries. Superficial venous drainage of the upper limb: on the dorsum of the hand, a dorsal venous network drains into the basilic and cephalic veins. In the cubital fossa, these two veins are connected by the median cubital vein, which is a common vein used for venipuncture.

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