There are the usual three centres of ossification, which unite eventually into a single bone--the innominate bone.
The left innominate vein crosses the front of the trachea somewhat obliquely, and may lie at least half an inch above the suprasternal notch.
When the pelvis is occupied by a chondroma, osteoma, or a sarcoma growing from the innominate bones or the sacrum, or from the fascia of the pelvis and displacing the gravid uterus, the proper course is to perform subtotal hysterectomy.
At about the middle of the outer surface of the innominate bone is a very deep cavity, the =acetabulum= (fig.
The bones constituting the pelvic girdle are not only as in other higher vertebrates ankylosed together forming the innominate bones, but are also ankylosed with a series of some seventeen sacral and pseudosacral vertebrae.
The right and left innominate arteries arise from the aortic trunk and give rise to the common carotid (14) and subclavian (1) arteries.
The right and left innominate or brachiocephalic arteries arise from the aortic trunk and give rise to the common carotid arteries (14).
The right and left innominate veins unite to form the descending vena cava which empties into the right auricle of the heart.
In doing this great care should be taken so as not to injure the carotid on the left and the innominate artery on the right side.
Here are given off theinnominate artery to the right and the common carotid and the subclavian to the left.
The right and left internal jugular veins pass down through the jugular foramens and down the neck to where they with the right and left subclavian veins form the right and left innominate veins.
The innominateis only about an inch or two in length, and divides into the right common carotid and the right subclavian arteries.
The superior laryngeal vein runs into the superior thyroid vein and then into the internal jugular vein, while the inferior laryngeal vein runs into the inferior thyroid vein and then into the innominate vein.
The tube will reach the innominate artery close to the arch of the aorta.
Note the two large branches, the innominate arteries, given off by it near its origin.
Each innominate divides into three smaller arteries, a carotid, branchial, and pectoral.
In the absence of the innominate artery, the right as well as the left carotid will be found to spring directly from the aortic arch.
They are, H, the innominate artery, and I K, the left common carotid and subclavian arteries.
The common carotid arteries, Of these two vessels, the left one arising, in general, from the arch of the aorta, is longer than the right one by the measure of the innominate artery from which the right arises.
The length of the inner portion of the right subclavian will vary according to the place at which it arises, whether from the innominate artery, from the ascending, or from the descending part of the aortic arch.
Now that the ribs are attached to the vertebrae, and the innominate bones to the sacrum, proceed to string the vertebrae again on the wires and rod.
A probe passed along the aorta into the innominate protruded into the same cavity about the bifurcation of the vessel.
Lewtas reports a case of ligation of the innominate and carotid arteries for traumatic aneurysm (likely a hematoma due to a gunshot injury of the subclavian artery).
The edge grazed against the sheath of the innominate artery during the operation.
In a child of three years that had swallowed a half-penny, Atkins reports rupture of the innominate artery.
The right innominatevein and right pneumogastric are in close contact with the artery on the right side; to avoid them the aneurism-needle must be entered on the outside (right of the vessel).
Barwell has reported several most interesting cases in which simultaneous ligature of carotid and subclavian have proved of marked benefit in aortic as well as in innominate aneurisms.
The left innominate vein crosses the artery in front from left to right, and must be drawn down.
The innominate artery divides into the right subclavian and right carotid exactly behind the sterno-clavicular articulation.
A dense process of cervical fascia (just becoming thoracic) now covers the vessel, binding it on the right side to the right innominate vein, and on the left maintaining the relation of the innominate artery to the trachea.
Peixotto of Portugal applied a precautionary ligature to the innominate in a case where secondary hæmorrhage occurred from the carotid.
And here we may also note that Mr. Heath has lately treated a case of innominate aneurism by simultaneous ligature of the third part of the subclavian and the carotid.
Innominate contracts (Law), in the Roman law, contracts without a specific name.
Having no name; unnamed; as, an innominate person or place.
At the root of the neck it receives the lymphatics of the left arm and left side of the neck and opens into the beginning of the left innominate vein, usually by more than one opening.
The cup-shaped cavity of the innominate bone for receiving the head of the femur.
At the outer side of each innominate bone is a cup, much deeper than the corresponding cup of the shoulder girdle, and into this fits the head of the skeleton of the leg.
In a good many people the union of the innominate bones to the sacrum is not so firm but that it yields somewhat when strains are put on it.
The innominate bones are firmly joined to the sacrum at the back and they meet in front, also in a firm joint.
Left brachial artery arising from a common innominate trunk, instead of coming off separately from the aortic arch.
The commonest arrangement of the great branches of the aortic arch in Mammals is that in which the innominate and left carotid arise by a single short trunk, while the left subclavian comes off later; this is also Man's commonest abnormality.
Sometimes, especially among the Ungulata, all the branches may rise from one common trunk; at other times two innominate arteries may be present; this is commonest in the Cheiroptera, Insectivora and Cetacea.
The innominateartery is the largest and passes upward and to the right, to the root of the neck, where it divides into the right common carotid and the right subclavian.
In the innominate bones of a young child the box-shape exists, while its prominent abdomen resembles that of the gorilla.
The inferior thyroid veins which drop their blood into the innominate are obstructed by valves at their junction.
Juristically this seems to be a rationalization of the Roman innominate contract.
They are represented by mouldy, defunct formulæ, and as yet no living popular voice, save that of the revolution of 1789, has been raised to ask where was the underlying life of the innominate crowd?
The pelvis is composed of four bones—2 Innominate or haunch-bones.
The innominate bones on their outer surfaces have cup-like depressions for the reception of the heads of the thigh-bones.