. The comparative anatomy of the domesticated animals. Horses; Veterinary anatomy. TEE GEE AT LYMPHATIC VEIN. 731 and the mylo-hyoideus and subscapulo-Lyoideus muscles on the other, above and near to the facial artery. The lymphatics of the tongue, cheeks, lips, nostrils, and nasal cavities join these glands. Their efferents reach the pharyngeal or guttural glands. 4. Prescapular Glands. By their union these form a kind of chain, at least twelve inches in length, placed on the course of the ascending branch of the inferior cervical artery, beneath the internal iace of the mastoido-humeralis mu


. The comparative anatomy of the domesticated animals. Horses; Veterinary anatomy. TEE GEE AT LYMPHATIC VEIN. 731 and the mylo-hyoideus and subscapulo-Lyoideus muscles on the other, above and near to the facial artery. The lymphatics of the tongue, cheeks, lips, nostrils, and nasal cavities join these glands. Their efferents reach the pharyngeal or guttural glands. 4. Prescapular Glands. By their union these form a kind of chain, at least twelve inches in length, placed on the course of the ascending branch of the inferior cervical artery, beneath the internal iace of the mastoido-humeralis muscle, and descending close to the attachment of the sterno-maxillaris muscle. The majority of the lympliatics of the neck, and those of the breast and shoulder, open into these glands. Their efi'ereuts, short and voluminous, enter the prepectoral glands. 5. Brachial Glands. Situated beneath the anterior limb, inside the arm, these vessels are divided into two groupsâone placed near the ulnar articulation, within the inferior extremity of the humerus ; the other disposed in a discoid mass behind the Fig. 400. Fig. THF. GREAT VKIX AND ENTRANCE OF THE THORACIC PVCT. A, Thoracic duct; B, great Ivmphatic vein, or risht Ivmphatic trunk; C, D, anastomose-; â stnb- lished between them near their insertion. brachial vessels, near the common insertion of the teres major and latissimus dorsi. The first group receives the vessels from the foot and the forearm, wnich accompany the superficial veins, or pass with the deep arteries and veins into the muscular interstices. It sends nine or ten flexuous branches to the second group, into which open directly the lymphatics of the arm and shoulder, and from which emerge a certain number of efferents that pass, in company with the axillary vessels, to the prepectoral glands. Article III.âGreat Lymphatic Vein. The second large receptive trunk of the lymphatic vessels, this great vein (the durfus h/mphatirm dextn) leaves the prep


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Keywords: ., bookauthorcha, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjecthorses