What is an iliakal vein?
iliakal vein is the main blood vessel of the pelvic area, which acquires its name from its position near Ilium or hip, bone. It has three different sections. The outer iliakal vein is located towards both sides of the pelvis and returns the blood to the body from the foot with a femoral vein. Along with it is an internal iliakal vein that is closer to the spine and receives blood from the reproductive organs and several hip muscles. These two converge near the upper part of the pelvis to form a common iliac vein that returns blood from the lower body to the heart through the lower vena cava. Deoxygenated blood is the blood that has already achieved its goal - organs, muscles and other vascular tissue - and supplied oxygen and vital nutrients to this tissue to be alive and function. Once these nutrients are delivered, through heating, blood circulates with veins back towards the heart and lungs, where it picks up more nutrients and oxygen to be transferred back to the body. In this case, the deoxygenated blood returns from the legs and the pelvis to be transported over the normal iliac vein of the singingt to the fuselage.
Blood transported by outer iliakal vein is accepted from two main vessels: lower epigastric and femoral veins. The lower epigastric vein returns the blood from Rectus Abdominus, the most Czech abdominal wall muscle, runs down towards the pelvis and merged with the external iliakal on the front hip on the outer ligament. This is the ligament that intersects the front of the pelvis from the iliakal ridge to the hair. The femoral vein, on the other hand, is the largest vein of returning blood from the foot. The deep vein rising from both thighs, receiving the blood keys from all the main tributaries in the leg and also meets the outer Iliac under the three ligament.
The inner iliakal vein is slightly shorter and narrower, but accepts blood from a larger number of tributaries. It is located to the pelvis and runs parallel to the spine, returns blood from the inner pudendal and veins in men and uterus, vaginal and fetal umbilical veins in women, all of whom are the blood vessels of the reproductive systememu. It also brings deoxygenated blood back from glual muscles through gluteal vein and spine using lateral sacral and liolambar veins. As soon as this blood enters the inner iliak inside the pelvis, it connects to the blood of the outer iliak at the top of the iliakal bone to form a conventional iliac vein that returns blood to the lower vena cava and then to the heart.