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Cardiovascular System. Blood Vessels. Anatomy of Blood Vessels. Arteries carry blood from the heart to the tissues. Anatomy of Blood Vessels. Arterioles are small arteries that connect to capillaries. Anatomy of Blood Vessels.
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Cardiovascular System Blood Vessels
Anatomy of Blood Vessels • Arteries carry blood from the heart to the tissues
Anatomy of Blood Vessels • Arterioles are small arteries that connect to capillaries
Anatomy of Blood Vessels • Capillaries are the site of substance exchange between the blood and body tissues
Anatomy of Blood Vessels • Venules connect capillaries to larger veins
Anatomy of Blood Vessels • Veins convey blood from the tissues back to the heart.
Arteries • Tunica interna (intima) – innermost • Tunica media – middle layer • Tunica externa – outer layer
Tunica Intima • Composed of; • simple squamous epithelium (endothelium) • Internal elastic membrane
Tunica Media • Rich in smooth muscle and elastic fibers
Tunica Media • Maintains elasticity and contractility
Tunica Externa • Rich in elastic and collagen fibers
Functional Properties of Arteries • Elasticity • Contractility
Elasticity • Due to the elastic tissue in the tunica intima and media
Elasticity • Allows arteries to accept blood under great pressure from the contraction of the ventricles
Contractility • Due to the smooth muscle in the tunica media
Contractility • Allows arteries to increase or decrease lumen size
Contractility • Sympathetic stimulation of alpha 1 receptors on cutaneous arteries causes vasoconstriction
Contractility • Sympathetic stimulation of beta 2 receptors on arteries supplying skeletal muscle causes vasodilation
Elastic Arteries • Elastic Arteries – Large arteries with more elastic fibers and less smooth muscle
Elastic Arteries • Example: aorta, sublcavian, and pulmonary arteries
Elastic Arteries • Also called conducting arteries because they conduct blood from the heart to medium sized arteries
Muscular or distributing arteries • Medium sized and have a large amount of smooth muscle and distribute blood to various parts of the body
Muscular or distributing arteries • Examples: brachial, femoral, and popliteal arteries
Arterioles • Very small arteries that deliver blood to capillaries
Capillaries • Connect arterioles and venules
Capillaries • Microcirculation – flow of blood through the capillaries
Capillaries • Capillaries are found near almost every cell in the body
Capillaries • Function – Permit the exchange of nutrients and wastes between the blood and tissue cells
Capillaries • Composed of a single layer of cells (endothelium) and a basement membrane
Capillaries • Two types; • Continuous • Fenestrated
Capillaries • Continuous – composed of endothelial cells that form a continuous tube that contains gaps between cells called intercellular clefts
Capillaries • Fenestrated capillaries – plasma membrane contains small pores
Capillaries • Materials can cross the blood capillary walls in four ways
Capillaries Four Ways; • Intercellular clefts • Trancytosis using pinocytic vesicles • Diffusion • Fenestrations
Intercellular clefts • Open in response to histamine (released during inflamation) making capillaries more leaky
Intercellular clefts • This allows fluid and wbc, and antibodies to go from the bloodstream to the site of infection
Pinocytosis • Large fats cross via pinocytosis
Diffusion • Water, CO2, and O2 cross capillaries by diffusion
Fenestrations • Allow small molecules such as water and electrolytes to get into the urine
Fenestrations • Prevent large proteins and red cells from getting into the urine
Sinusoids • Discontinuous capillaries
Sinusoids • Present in the liver
Sinusoids • Allow large molecules such as protein and bilirubin to get from the bloodstream into hepatocytes
Venules • They are small vessels that are formed from the union of several capillaries
Venules • Merges to form veins
Venules • Drain blood from capillaries into veins