VEIN - translation to arabic
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VEIN - translation to arabic

BLOOD VESSEL THAT CARRY DEOXYGENATED BLOOD TOWARDS THE HEART, WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE PULMONARY VEIN
Venous; Veins; Venous system; Vein valve; Venous valves; Veiny; Veined; Venously; Vein valves; Venous valve; Venous diseases; Venous disorder; Venous disorders
  • Diagram showing venous blood flow from [[capillary bed]]s in some specific locations including the [[lung]]s, [[liver]], and [[kidney]]s
  • Diagram of different sized veins with differing component proportions
  • Deep and superficial veins of the arm and near thorax
  • Positions of [[venae cavae]] and vessels of the [[pulmonary circulation]]
  • Layers of vein wall shown in comparison to arterial wall
  • Venous valve stopping backflow
  • Video of valve in [[popliteal vein]]
  • Image of veins from [[William Harvey]]'s ''Exercitatio Anatomica de Motu Cordis et Sanguinis in Animalibus''

VEIN         

ألاسم

عَيْر

الفعل

جَزَّعَ ; عَرَّقَ

vein         
اسْم : وَريد . العِرق وهو ضلع الورقة أو جناح الحشرة أو عِرق معدني أو عِرق في الخشب أو الرخام . مَسْحة . مزاج
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فِعْل : يعرّق . يجزّع
vein         
‎ وَريد‎

Definition

vein
¦ noun
1. any of the tubes forming part of the circulation system by which blood is conveyed from all parts of the body towards the heart.
(in general use) a blood vessel.
2. (in plants) a slender rib running through a leaf, typically dividing or branching, and containing vascular tissue.
(in insects) a hollow rib forming part of the supporting framework of a wing.
3. a streak or stripe of a different colour in wood, marble, cheese, etc.
a fracture in rock containing a deposit of minerals or ore.
a source of a specified quality: he has tapped a national vein of anger.
4. a distinctive quality, style, or tendency: he closes his article in a humorous vein.
Derivatives
veined adjective
veining noun
veinless adjective
veinlet noun
vein-like adjective
veiny adjective
Origin
ME: from OFr. veine, from L. vena.

Wikipedia

Vein

Veins are blood vessels in the circulatory system of humans and most other animals that carry blood toward the heart. Most veins carry deoxygenated blood from the tissues back to the heart; exceptions are those of the pulmonary and fetal circulations which carry oxygenated blood to the heart. In the systemic circulation arteries carry oxygenated blood away from the heart, and veins return deoxygenated blood to the heart, in the deep veins.

There are three sizes of veins, large, medium, and small. Smaller veins are called venules, and the smallest the post-capillary venules are microscopic that make up the veins of the microcirculation. Veins are often closer to the skin than arteries.

Veins have less smooth muscle, and connective tissue, and wider internal diameters than arteries. Because of their thinner walls and wider lumens they are able to expand and hold more blood. This greater capacity gives them the term of capacitance vessels. At any time, nearly 70% of the total volume of blood in the human body is in the veins. In medium and large sized veins the flow of blood is maintained by one-way (unidirectional) venous valves to prevent backflow. In the lower limbs this is also aided by muscle pumps, also known as venous pumps that exert pressure on intramuscular veins when they contract and drive blood back to the heart.

Examples of use of VEIN
1. Prison staff had problems finding a usable vein on Clark, and a vein they used collapsed.
2. Prison staff had problems finding a useable vein on Clark, and one vein they did use collapsed.
3. Prison staff had problems finding a usable vein on Joseph Clark in May 2006, and a vein they used collapsed.
4. The issue explained 20.12.2002: Deep vein thrombosis
5. In the worse scenario, the nurse misses the vein.