Questions in this topic
- Are there veins in your armpits?
- What is arterial steal syndrome?
- What is axillary area?
- What is considered the most suitable vein for taking blood?
- What is the easiest vein to shoot up in?
- What is the treatment for subclavian steal syndrome?
- What nerves pass through c5 c6?
- What vein is commonly used to draw blood from for an obese patient?
- Where does the subclavian artery become the axillary?
- Which arm has the main artery?
- Which serous membrane layer is closest to the surface of the heart?
- Which vein is most commonly used to draw blood from the arm?
- Which vein is often the only one that can be palpated in an obese patient?
- Why do veins collapse during blood?
- What is a subclavian steal?
- What is a normal size axillary lymph node?
- Can a blocked carotid artery cause a heart attack?
- Can subclavian steal syndrome cause a stroke?
- Can you draw blood from any vein?
- Do collapsed veins heal?
- How do you hit a vein correctly?
- How do you know if you hit a nerve?
- How do you treat steal syndrome?
- How is steal syndrome diagnosed?
- Is subclavian steal syndrome life threatening?
- What are the symptoms of subclavian steal syndrome?
- What causes hematomas during phlebotomy?
- What does the axillary artery become?
- What happens if the subclavian artery is blocked?
- Why is subclavian steal syndrome more common on the left?