Arteries, Arterioles, Veins, Arteries, Arterioles, Veins, Venules, & CapillariesVenules, & Capillaries
ArteriesArteries• Large hose-like vessels
• Carry blood away from the heart.
• Have thick, multi-layered muscular walls.
• Walls are capable of stretching to accommodate the “pulse” of blood when the heart beats.
ArteriesArteries
• Capable of expanding and contracting to change and maintain the blood pressure.
• NO valves• Blood spurts• Blood inside them is
high in oxygen & low in carbon dioxide except in pulmonary artery.
ArteriesArteries
• Blood inside is bright red
• Blood inside is under High pressure
• Examples: Coronary (heart), Brachial (arms),Carotid (head),Femoral (legs), Renal (kidney).
ArteriolesArterioles
• Tiny branches off of the arteries.• Cannot be seen with unaided eye -
microscopic• Thinner, less muscular walls (compared to
arteries)• Feed blood into the capillaries.• Narrower than arteries, but wider than
capillaries.
CapillariesCapillaries• Flow and pressure of blood
is controlled by sphincters that are outside of the capillaries.
• Microscopic vessels ~ 8 µm in diameter.
• Erythrocytes (rbc’s) pass through in single file.
• Walls are only one cell thick (to facilitate diffusion of materials/exchange).
CapillariesCapillaries
• Thinness allows for easy diffusion outward or inward through the single cell layer.
• Form capillary beds - networks of vessels linking arterial and venous blood.
CapillariesCapillaries
• Oxygen , nutrients and other materials move out of the capillaries and into the extra-cellular fluid and then into cells.
• Carbon dioxide, wastes and other materials are picked up and move into the capillaries: (both involve diffusion for the movement).
VenulesVenules
• Vessels larger than capillaries but smaller (i.e. narrower and thinner walls) than veins.
VeinsVeins• Larger inside diameter compared to
arteries• Take blood towards the heart• Thinner, less muscular walls than
arteries, but still 3 layers• No stretching or contracting of walls
except by external muscles.• Contain valves to help return the
blood to the heart (compensate for lower venous pressure, less muscle in walls, and large diameter).
Veins - ValvesVeins - Valves
VeinsVeins
Blood:
• Moves smoothly.
• Low in oxygen except pulmonary circulation.
• Dull red.
• Low pressure.
• Examples: cardiac (heart), brachial (arms), jugular (head), femoral (legs), renal (kidney).
Varicose Veins (copy this)Varicose Veins (copy this)
• When the valves don’t function properly, blood leaks backwards and pools in veins
• Veins sag, stretch and swell, creating bulging knarled vessels
The END!!