 Okay, so we're going to look at the arteries and veins associated with the thoracic part of the body as well as the arms themselves. So we can see here with the heart my aorta. So coming up and you have three branches of the aorta itself. You have the brachiosephalic trunk, which is that first branch you have the common carotid, left common carotid, and the left subclavian. It's the third branch there. Okay, as they come up, you can see the left common carotid artery, which is immediately next to the left jugular vein. Our subclavian comes across this way on this case off over here. It's a left and right there. Okay, as we've branched down on the arteries here, we can see the first branch. So this is all subclavian and we have this branch here, which is the humoral circumflex artery. After this branch, this becomes the axillary artery. Then there's another branch here and after that branch it becomes the brachial artery. Look down at the top part of the hand. Okay, so right here is the deep palmar arch. Come back. So now we're on the right side here. Okay, so my right subclavian is coming in here. We can see that humoral circumflex artery branch here. Okay, so that makes this part my axillary artery, which makes this part the axillary vein. Okay, this branch here that's the right brachial vein. After that, the vein here becomes the bacillic vein. On the outside, you have the sephillic vein. So C-C-E-P-H-A-L-I-C versus Bacillic-B-A-S-I-L-I-C veins. Okay, moving down. So now we're at the forearm here. You can see the median cubital vein, which is the one that kind of crosses the center here. Okay. This would be the radius. This would be the ulna. So that makes this my ulnar artery and vein immediately adjacent to it and my radial artery and vein immediately adjacent. In the hand, you have a couple more arteries here. So you have the right superficial palmar arch right here and you have the right digital arteries, which is arteries just associated with the digits there.