The great saphenous vein is the longest vein in the body. It is a superficial vein located in the leg.
Superficial vein is a term used to describe a vein that is close to the surface of the body. It is used to differentiate veins that are close to the surface from veins that are far from the surface, known as deep veins. Superficial veins are important physiologically for cooling of the body. When the body is too hot the body shunts blood from the deep veins to the superficial veins, to facilitate heat transfer to the surroundings. Superficial veins can be seen under the skin.
A collapsed vein cannot restore or repair itself over time, but the body grows other smaller veins near the damaged ones.
The superior and inferior vena cava are the largest veins in the body.
Visceral surface of the liver where the portal vein & hepatic vein meet
the largest vein in the body is the vena cava
pulmonary vein
The facial vein is the main vein of the face. After receiving the supratrochlear and supraorbital veins, it travels obliquely downwards by the side of the nose, passes under zygomaticus major, risorius and platysma, descends to the anterior border and then passes over the surface of masseter. It crosses the body of the mandible, and runs in the neck to drain into the internal jugular vein.
The longest vein in the human body would be the saphenous vein.
the major vein in the human body is called big blue
right....... there.
the answer it the pulmanary vein