vena obliqua atrii sinistri
— Noun
– English
~ a tributary of the coronary sinus; on the posterior wall of the left atrium
vena pylorica
— Noun
– English
~ a tributary of the right gastric vein
vena thoracica
— Noun
– English
~ veins that drain the thoracic walls
vena laryngea
— Noun
– English
~ one of two veins draining the larynx
vena intercapitalis
— Noun
– English
~ veins connecting the dorsal and palmar veins of the hand or the dorsal and plantar veins of the foot
vena diploica
— Noun
– English
~ one of the veins serving the spongy part of the cranial bones
vena circumflexus femoris
— Noun
– English
~ either of two veins that accompany arteries of the same name serving the hip and thigh
vena cephalica accessoria
— Noun
– English
~ a vein that passes along the radial edge of the forearm and joins the cephalic vein near the elbow
vena labialis
— Noun
– English
~ a vein draining the lips of the mouth
vena colica
— Noun
– English
~ vein serving the large intestine
vena scrotalis
— Noun
– English
~ veins passing from the scrotum to the pudendal veins
vena profunda penis
— Noun
– English
~ deep vein of the penis; enters the prostatic plexus
vena gastrica sinistra
— Noun
– English
~ arises from a union of veins from the gastric cardia; runs in the lesser omentum; empties into the portal vein
vena cephalica
— Noun
– English
~ a large vein of the arm that empties into the axillary vein
vena poplitea
— Noun
– English
~ a vein arising in the knee and ascending to become the femoral vein
vena portae
— Noun
– English
~ a short vein that carries blood into the liver
vena ovarica
— Noun
– English
~ one of the veins that drain the ovaries; the right opens into the inferior vena cava; the left opens into the left renal vein
vena metacarpus
— Noun
– English
~ dorsal and palmar veins of the hand
vena musculophrenica
— Noun
– English
~ veins that drain the upper abdominal wall and the lower intercostal spaces and the abdomen
vena lingualis
— Noun
– English
~ a vein that receives blood from the tongue and the floor of the mouth and empties into the internal jugular or the facial vein