User:Taylorg26/Jugular Vein
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The jugular veins are veins that take deoxygenated blood from the head, brain, face, and neck (medicine Net cite) back to the heart via the superior vena cava. It descends next to the internal carotid artery and continues posteriorly to the sternocleidomastoid muscle[1]. The structure and function of the Jugular Artery is how it works, and what it looks like and where it is in the body. The Clinical Significance is where it will talk about what can affect the Jugular Artery and how it is significant. Arteries take blood away from the heart and veins circle the blood back to the heart, venules then huddle together to create veins.[2] And the idiomatic expression is how the use of the world "Jugular Vein" is used outside of the medical meaning.
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