How To Use brachial In A Sentence
- The stethoscope that comes with some models is used to listen to the sounds your blood makes as it flows through the brachial artery in the crook of your elbow.
- In common whitlow of the finger, how the arteries of the arm, the brachial in particular, throb, is well known. The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 10, No. 274, September 22, 1827
- The lower slip, after crossing the cords of the brachial plexus and axillary artery, passed deep to coracobrachialis and terminated by fusing with the tendons of latissimus dorsi and teres major in the bicipital groove.
- Many Devonian species differ from Early Carboniferous species in having quadrate rather than cuneate brachials and in having straight-sided rather than zigzag arms.
- Successful treatment of hydrofluoric acid burns of the fingers with intraarterial infusions of calcium salts has been reported. 15 A 1.66 percent solution of calcium gluconate or calcium chloride was infused slowly into the radial or brachial artery over four hours. Hydrofluoric Acid
- Neurapraxia of the brachial plexus or cervical nerve roots, often called a stinger or burner, causes pain and paresthesia in a single upper extremity, usually radiating from the neck into the shoulder, arm, or hand.
- Placement of the cuff for brachial pressure measurement was approximately 3 cm above the cubital fossa.
- It pierces the lateral intermuscular septum, and passes between the Brachialis and Brachioradialis to the front of the lateral epicondyle, where it divides into a superficial and a deep branch. IX. Neurology. 6b. The Anterior Divisions
- As it descends through the arm, it lies at first lateral to the brachial artery; about the level of the insertion of the Coracobrachialis it crosses the artery, usually in front of, but occasionally behind it, and lies on its medial side at the bend of the elbow, where it is situated behind the lacertus fibrosus (bicipital fascia), and is separated from the elbow-joint by the Brachialis. IX. Neurology. 6b. The Anterior Divisions
- In 1943, Spillane was probably the first to recognize acute brachial plexus neuritis as a distinct clinical entity.