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  1. Nayak BS
    Clin Anat, 2006 Sep;19(6):544-6.
    PMID: 16372344
    Knowledge of variations of veins of head and neck in relation to external jugular, anterior jugular, internal jugular, and facial veins is important to surgeons doing head and neck surgery as well as to radiologists doing catheterization and to clinicians in general. In the current case, multiple variations in the veins of the left side of neck are reported. The anterior division of retromandibular vein was absent. The facial vein continued as anterior jugular vein. The internal jugular vein was duplicated above the level of hyoid bone. There was a large communicating vein between the anterior jugular vein and anterior division of internal jugular vein. Lingual vein drained into the communicating vein. Jugular venous arch was abnormally large, doubled, and highly placed. The veins of the right side were normal.
    Matched MeSH terms: Jugular Veins/surgery
  2. Tang IP, Singh S, Shoba N, Rahmat O, Shivalingam S, Gopala KG, et al.
    Auris Nasus Larynx, 2009 Jun;36(3):380-2.
    PMID: 19019597 DOI: 10.1016/j.anl.2008.08.003
    Ingested foreign bodies are a fairly common otorhinolaryngological emergencies encountered in Malaysia. The vast majority of these foreign bodies are fish bones which most commonly are impacted at the level of the cricopharynx. Rarely, however, a foreign body may migrate extraluminally and may even extrude subcutaneously. We report a rare occurrence where a fish bone not only migrated extraluminally, it was found to have migrated into the common carotid artery and the internal jugular vein and required surgical removal.
    Matched MeSH terms: Jugular Veins/surgery
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