Blood pumped by the heart flows through a series of vessels known as arteries, arterioles, capillaries, venules, and veins before returning to the heart.
Differences in Vessel Wall - left, cross section of vein, right, cross section of artery
Image by TheVisualMD
Blood Vessels
Blood, Heart and Circulation
Image by TheVisualMD
Blood, Heart and Circulation
Your heart is a muscular organ that pumps blood to your body. Your heart is at the center of your circulatory system. This system consists of a network of blood vessels, such as arteries, veins, and capillaries. These blood vessels carry blood to and from all areas of your body.
Image by TheVisualMD
Blood Vessels
Blood is carried through the body via blood vessels. An artery is a blood vessel that carries blood away from the heart, where it branches into ever-smaller vessels. Eventually, the smallest arteries, vessels called arterioles, further branch into tiny capillaries, where nutrients and wastes are exchanged, and then combine with other vessels that exit capillaries to form venules, small blood vessels that carry blood to a vein, a larger blood vessel that returns blood to the heart.
Arteries and veins transport blood in two distinct circuits: the systemic circuit and the pulmonary circuit (image). Systemic arteries provide blood rich in oxygen to the body’s tissues. The blood returned to the heart through systemic veins has less oxygen, since much of the oxygen carried by the arteries has been delivered to the cells. In contrast, in the pulmonary circuit, arteries carry blood low in oxygen exclusively to the lungs for gas exchange. Pulmonary veins then return freshly oxygenated blood from the lungs to the heart to be pumped back out into systemic circulation. Although arteries and veins differ structurally and functionally, they share certain features.
Overview
Blood pumped by the heart flows through a series of vessels known as arteries, arterioles, capillaries, venules, and veins before returning to the heart. Arteries transport blood away from the heart and branch into smaller vessels, forming arterioles. Arterioles distribute blood to capillary beds, the sites of exchange with the body tissues. Capillaries lead back to small vessels known as venules that flow into the larger veins and eventually back to the heart.
The arterial system is a relatively high-pressure system, so arteries have thick walls that appear round in cross section. The venous system is a lower-pressure system, containing veins that have larger lumens and thinner walls. They often appear flattened. Arteries, arterioles, venules, and veins are composed of three tunics known as the tunica intima, tunica media, and tunica externa. Capillaries have only a tunica intima layer. The tunica intima is a thin layer composed of a simple squamous epithelium known as endothelium and a small amount of connective tissue. The tunica media is a thicker area composed of variable amounts of smooth muscle and connective tissue. It is the thickest layer in all but the largest arteries. The tunica externa is primarily a layer of connective tissue, although in veins, it also contains some smooth muscle. Blood flow through vessels can be dramatically influenced by vasoconstriction and vasodilation in their walls.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (44)
Wall of Artery / Wall of Vein
Wall of Artery / Wall of Vein
Wall of Artery - Your arteries are made up of three layers of cells: the tunica intima, the tunica media, and the tunica adventitia. The tunica intima is actually a single layer of endothelial cells. These cells are used as lining in many parts of your body. They provide a smooth surface for the blood to flow on. In addition, the endothelial layer is a functioning system that secretes different products and responds to different stimuli from the blood vessels and tissues. The tunica media or middle layer of the artery contains the muscle cells and other structural and elastic fibers that contract and dilate the artery. One of the signs of arterial aging is a loss of the pliability of the muscle cells in the tunica media and a loss of ability to distend. The tunica adventitia, the outer layer, contains the artery's support system - tiny blood vessels that feed the artery and nerves that respond to signals and control the artery's contraction and dilation.
Wall of Vein - Like arteries, veins are also made of three layers. However, veins do not contract like arteries. Veins in the lower part of your body have one-way valves to counteract the effects of gravity and prevent blood from flowing back into the feet. Veins in the upper part of the body have no valves because gravity itself brings the blood back \"down\" to the heart. Unfortunately, valves can be damaged and weakened over time. Varicose veins are caused by leaky valves that allow blood to pool and bulge in the veins of the legs.
Vasodilation and Blood Vessels at Work - Dilation and Constriction
1) Blood Vessel Wall Dilation
2) Blood Vessel Wall Constriction - Your blood vessels also respond to the needs of your body. In addition to being the blood supply lines, blood vessels can contract or dilate to divert blood flow to different parts of the body. There are three main types of blood vessels: arteries, veins, and capillaries. At any one time, a healthy adult has about five quarts of blood moving through these vessels. Your blood vessels also respond to the needs of your body. In addition to being the blood supply lines, blood vessels can contract or dilate to divert blood flow to different parts of the body. There are three main types of blood vessels: arteries, veins, and capillaries. At any one time, a healthy adult has about five quarts of blood moving through these vessels. Arteries are blood vessels that carry blood away from your heart to the rest of the body and to the lungs. All arteries carry oxygenated blood except the pulmonary artery. The pulmonary artery carries deoxygenated blood from your heart to the lungs. Veins carry blood to the heart. In general, your veins carry deoxygenated blood, but as in the arteries, the pulmonary vein is an exception. It carries oxygenated blood from the lungs back to the heart.
Interactive by TheVisualMD
Artery with Healthy Blood Flow / Artery with Decreased Blood Flow Due to Plaque
Blood Flow in Arteries
Blood Flow
1) Artery with Healthy - Cross-section of an artery, showing healthy blood flow. Arteries are blood vessels that carry blood away from your heart. Healthy arteries are strong and elastic. They become narrow between beats of the heart, and they help keep your blood pressure consistent. This helps blood circulate efficiently through your body. Arteries branch into smaller blood vessels called arterioles. Arteries and arterioles have strong, flexible walls that allow them to adjust the amount and rate of blood flowing to different parts of your body.
2) Decreased blood flow due to an obstructive buildup of plaque - Cross-section of an artery, showing decreased blood flow due to an obstructive buildup of plaque.
Interactive by TheVisualMD
Table showing average lumen diameter, wall thickness, and relative tissue makeup of different vessel types
Image by Pressbooks
Pulmonary circulation
Blood Flow Through the Heart and Lungs . Cardiovascular System.
Image by Blausen Medical Communications, Inc.
Differences in Vessel Wall - left, cross section of vein, right, cross section of artery
Medical visualization of a vein and artery. Superficially, arteries and veins look alike. Running parallel, they have about the same thickness. But structurally they differ. Arteries (right), carrying oxygen-rich blood from the heart to the tissues under high pressure, have in their walls a wide middle layer of muscle fibers and elastic tissue, which allows them to expand and recoil as the heart contracts. Veins (left), on the other hand, transport spent blood back to the heart under low pressure. They have thinner walls, making them more susceptible to contractions in surrounding muscles and a succession of valve flaps to prevent back flow.
Image by TheVisualMD
Dual System of the Human Blood Circulation
Blood flows from the right atrium to the right ventricle, where it is pumped into the pulmonary circuit. The blood in the pulmonary artery branches is low in oxygen but relatively high in carbon dioxide. Gas exchange occurs in the pulmonary capillaries (oxygen into the blood, carbon dioxide out), and blood high in oxygen and low in carbon dioxide is returned to the left atrium. From here, blood enters the left ventricle, which pumps it into the systemic circuit. Following exchange in the systemic capillaries (oxygen and nutrients out of the capillaries and carbon dioxide and wastes in), blood returns to the right atrium and the cycle is repeated.
Image by CNX Openstax
Cardiovascular Circulation
The pulmonary circuit moves blood from the right side of the heart to the lungs and back to the heart. The systemic circuit moves blood from the left side of the heart to the head and body and returns it to the right side of the heart to repeat the cycle. The arrows indicate the direction of blood flow, and the colors show the relative levels of oxygen concentration.
Image by CNX Openstax
This browser does not support the video element.
Blood Vessel in Capillary Bed
An animation of a 2.5 D relief of blood vessels in a capillary bed. This relief is based on a colored scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of a resin cast of blood vessels supplying the small intestine. This branching network of vessels infiltrates the tissue of the intestine, supplying it with blood. Gases and nutrients are exchanged between the blood and surrounding tissue through the permeable walls of capillaries, the smallest blood vessels. The cast was made by injecting resin into the blood vessels. The surrounding tissues were then chemically digested. In this animation, the camera pulls away from a larger vessel and rotates slightly to the left in order to view the rest of the landscape. At the end of the scene, the large blood vessel runs along the left, bottom, and right sides of the screen and frames the capillaries.
Video by TheVisualMD
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Skull Revealing Cranial Vessel
An animation in VG Max of the cranial vessels within the skull and neck of the visible male. Not only can the vessels be seen through the semi-transparent skull but the glass brain and eyes as well. The scene opens with the skull in profile, facing right. The glass brain and vessels can be seen clearly through the skull showing the internal and external carotid arteries and cranial vessels. The camera moves in closer as it rotates over the front of the head and vessels. It rotates to the right and stops at a superior view of the skull, cranial vessels, and shoulders.
Video by TheVisualMD
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Red Blood Cell (RBC) Flowing Through Vessel
Straight on shot of a capillary bed with red blood cells flowing through the vessels. Cells of the surrounding tissue not well defined. Vessels and red blood cells well defined. (type of cells/tissue)
Video by TheVisualMD
This browser does not support the video element.
Marvel of Blood Vessels
Marvel at the blood vessels' ability to adjust and adapt to environmental changes.
Video by TheVisualMD
This browser does not support the video element.
Capillary Bed with Blood Flow
Straight on shot of a capillary bed within tissue with red blood cells flowing through the semitransparent vessels (type of cells/tissue)
Video by TheVisualMD
This browser does not support the video element.
Capillary Bed with Red Blood Cell (RBC) Flowing
Straight on shot of a capillary bed within tissue with red blood cells flowing through the semitransparent vessels. Cells of the surrounding tissue somewhat well defined (type of cells/tissue)
Video by TheVisualMD
This browser does not support the video element.
Chest and Arm Blood Flow
Animation showing blood flowing through vessels in the chest and arm of a figure with transparent skin. The heart, as well as the subclavian, axillary, brachial, subscapular, radial, ulnar and median arteries are seen in addition to the pulmonary vessels. Black background.
Video by TheVisualMD
This browser does not support the video element.
Beating Heart Within Chest
Camera zooms in through a complex network of blood vessels to focus on the beating heart within the chest. The pulmonary vessels can be seen as well.
Video by TheVisualMD
Blood Vessels, Part 1 - Form and Function: Crash Course A&P #27
Video by CrashCourse/YouTube
Blood Vessels, Part 2: Crash Course A&P #28
Video by CrashCourse/YouTube
Blood Vessels In The Body - What Are Blood Vessels - Functions Of Blood Vessels
Video by Whats Up Dude/YouTube
What is the Blood-Brain Barrier?
Video by Neuro Transmissions/YouTube
A look at the smallest blood vessels in the eye
Video by National Eye Institute, NIH/YouTube
Learn About How the Blood Works
Video by NHLBI/YouTube
Microanatomy of arteries and veins (preview) - Human Anatomy | Kenhub
Video by Kenhub - Learn Human Anatomy/YouTube
Marvel of Blood Vessels
Marvel at the blood vessels' ability to adjust and adapt to environmental changes.
Image by TheVisualMD
Your blood vessels are the body's superhighway
Your blood vessels are the body's superhighway. Blood races through more than 50,000 miles of vessels, delivering nutrients to cells and hauling waste products away from them. One of the blood's most vital passengers is oxygen. Oxygen binds to hemoglobin, a protein in red blood cells, and is carried to cells throughout the body. Anemia occurs when hemoglobin does not carry enough oxygen to cells. There are several possible causes. Sometimes the body has too little iron, which is essential to the formation of hemoglobin. Deficiencies of vitamin B-12 or folic acid can also cause anemia. Sometimes there are not enough red blood cells, which can result from ulcers or other undetected sources of blood loss. And sometimes the body simply demands more iron for growth: Pregnant women and growing toddlers are at increased risk of anemia. People who are anemic can have headaches, dizziness, difficulty breathing, fatigue and they may feel cold. Anyone who has such symptoms can find out, through a simple blood test, whether some form of anemia is to blame. To keep that superhighway moving, we have to make sure that the blood is doing its job.
Image by TheVisualMD
Aging Vessels
This video explains the the nature of aging vessels. An infant has a healthy blood vessel. But as a person ages, even with a healthy lifestyle, the blood vessels stiffens and constricts, putting every organ in our bodies at risk.
Image by TheVisualMD
Small blood vessels in a mouse retina
Blood vessels at the back of the eye (retina) are used to diagnose glaucoma and diabetic eye disease. They also display characteristic changes in people with high blood pressure. In the image, the vessels appear green. It's not actually the vessels that are stained green, but rather filaments of a protein called actin that wraps around the vessels. Most of the red blood cells were replaced by fluid as the tissue was prepared for the microscope. The tiny red dots are red blood cells that remain in the vessels.
The image was captured using confocal and 2-photon excitation microscopy for a project related to neurofibromatosis.
Image by National Center for Microscopy and Imaging Research
Blood Vessels in the Brain
The Blood Brain Barrier and Astrocytes type 1
Image by Ben Brahim Mohammed
Narrowed Vessels
Hypertension contributes to atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries. Atherosclerosis can result when the arterial walls try to defend themselves against the increased force of the blood by becoming stiffer, thicker, and narrower. Narrowed vessels choke off blood flow and lead to heart attack, stroke, and a host of other complications. Reduced blood flow to the heart can cause angina (chest pain) and myocardial infarction—a heart attack. People with hypertension are 4-6 times more likely to have a stroke. Hardening of the large arteries leads to blockage and weakening of the smaller blood vessels of the brain. This makes them susceptible to both types of stroke, ischemic and hemorrhagic.
Image by TheVisualMD
Blood Vessel Wall Dilation
Your blood vessels also respond to the needs of your body. In addition to being the blood supply lines, blood vessels can contract or dilate to divert blood flow to different parts of the body. There are three main types of blood vessels: arteries, veins, and capillaries. At any one time, a healthy adult has about five quarts of blood moving through these vessels. Your blood vessels also respond to the needs of your body. In addition to being the blood supply lines, blood vessels can contract or dilate to divert blood flow to different parts of the body. There are three main types of blood vessels: arteries, veins, and capillaries. At any one time, a healthy adult has about five quarts of blood moving through these vessels. Arteries are blood vessels that carry blood away from your heart to the rest of the body and to the lungs. All arteries carry oxygenated blood except the pulmonary artery. The pulmonary artery carries deoxygenated blood from your heart to the lungs. Veins carry blood to the heart. In general, your veins carry deoxygenated blood, but as in the arteries, the pulmonary vein is an exception. It carries oxygenated blood from the lungs back to the heart.
Image by TheVisualMD
Blood Vessel Wall Constriction
Your blood vessels also respond to the needs of your body. In addition to being the blood supply lines, blood vessels can contract or dilate to divert blood flow to different parts of the body. There are three main types of blood vessels: arteries, veins, and capillaries. At any one time, a healthy adult has about five quarts of blood moving through these vessels. Your blood vessels also respond to the needs of your body. In addition to being the blood supply lines, blood vessels can contract or dilate to divert blood flow to different parts of the body. There are three main types of blood vessels: arteries, veins, and capillaries. At any one time, a healthy adult has about five quarts of blood moving through these vessels. Arteries are blood vessels that carry blood away from your heart to the rest of the body and to the lungs. All arteries carry oxygenated blood except the pulmonary artery. The pulmonary artery carries deoxygenated blood from your heart to the lungs. Veins carry blood to the heart. In general, your veins carry deoxygenated blood, but as in the arteries, the pulmonary vein is an exception. It carries oxygenated blood from the lungs back to the heart.
Image by TheVisualMD
Drawing of blood vessels in the penis
Healthy blood vessels are needed for an erection.
Image by NIDDK Image Library
Blood vessels-3D rendering
3D rendering of a 1 cubic millimeter portion of mouse brain cortex. Blood vessels staining. Stitched image stacks acquired using a custom made two-photon fluorescence microscope (TPFM).
Image by Antonino Paolo Di Giovanna/Wikimedia
Index finger with visible blood vessels and blood drop
Through the translucent skin in this image, you can see the intricate labyrinth of vessels that exist below the surface of the index finger. The web of vessels shown here represents only a fraction of the complex vascularization of our fingertips. When blood sugar levels get too high, such as in chronic diabetes, these delicate capillaries are usually the first vessels to suffer damage.
Image by TheVisualMD
Index finger with Blood Vessels
Through the translucent skin in this image, you can see the intricate labyrinth of vessels that exist below the surface of the index finger. The web of vessels shown here represents only a fraction of the complex vascularization of our fingertips. When blood sugar levels get too high, such as in chronic diabetes, these delicate capillaries are usually the first vessels to suffer damage.
Image by TheVisualMD
Blood Vessels and red blood cells carrying oxygen in and CO2 out.
The cardiovascular system is vast network of arteries, veins and vessels that would extend 60,000 miles if stretched end-to-end. All but a tiny fraction of this vessel network is invisible to the naked eye. The smallest capillaries (from Latin "hair-like") are so narrow that red blood cells must pass through in single file. Higher than normal blood iron levels have been linked to heart disease and the reason is believed to be the oxidative stress the excess iron places on the walls of the blood vessels. It is the biological counterpart of rust.
Image by TheVisualMD
The Blood-Brain Barrier
This image shows a dense network of blood vessels (red) and nuclei (blue) obtained from mouse brain tissue that was optically cleared to look deeper into the tissue than otherwise possible. The brain’s blood vessels are nearly impermeable, allowing only the passage of key nutrients while blocking that of harmful substances. Unfortunately, this blood-brain barrier (BBB) also excludes most therapeutics. By designing drug-containing nanoparticles that can “hitchhike” across the BBB, researchers hope to finally penetrate the barrier, and deliver life-saving drugs to cancers in the brain. Pictured here is brain tissue before exposure to the experimental nanoparticles.
Image by California Institute of Technology / Emily Wyatt, Mark Davis
Artery showing Blood Flow / Narrowed Vessels due to Hypertension
High Blood Pressure Damages Blood Vessels
1) Artery showing Blood Flow - In a healthy body, the blood vessels are smooth and elastic. But as we grow older, the elastic fibers in the vessel walls are replaced with a stiffer substance, collagen. This makes them less able to expand, increasing blood pressure inside the vessel. Uncontrolled hypertension puts additional stress on the walls. As a defense against the increased pressure, blood vessels stiffen their walls still more. This hardening and stiffening of the arteries is called atherosclerosis. The heart has to work harder to pump blood through the vessels, and blood pressure rises even more.
2) Narrowed Vessels due to Hypertension - Hypertension contributes to atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries. Atherosclerosis can result when the arterial walls try to defend themselves against the increased force of the blood by becoming stiffer, thicker, and narrower. Narrowed vessels choke off blood flow and lead to heart attack, stroke, and a host of other complications. Reduced blood flow to the heart can cause angina (chest pain) and myocardial infarction—a heart attack. People with hypertension are 4-6 times more likely to have a stroke. Hardening of the large arteries leads to blockage and weakening of the smaller blood vessels of the brain. This makes them susceptible to both types of stroke, ischemic and hemorrhagic.
Interactive by TheVisualMD
Capillary within Muscle Tissue
Insulin and Glucose in Arteriole
Insulin Dispersion
Insulin Dispersion with Molecular Inset
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1) Capillary within Muscle Tissue 2) Insulin and Glucose in Arteriole 3) Insulin Dispersion 4) Insulin Disper
1) Capillary within Muscle Tissue - The body's blood vessels, consisting of arteries, veins, and capillaries, range in size from arteries as wide as a garden hose to capillaries so thin that it would take 10 of them, lined up side by side, to form the thickness of a human hair. But they all have one thing in common: they are designed to move blood as quickly and efficiently as possible. That means they need to be strong, flexible, and smooth. Even the components of your blood, like red blood cells, platelets, and white blood cells, are designed for movement. Red blood cells can actually flex so that they are able to flow through the finest of capillaries. Damage to blood vessels is something that all the main complications of diabetes have in common. Diabetes injures both large vessels (arteries) and small vessels (capillaries), leading to atherosclerosis and many other disorders. When the level of glucose in the blood is high, insulin signals certain cells, including muscle, fat, and liver cells, to take glucose in. Without insulin, glucose can't get into the cells, so it remains in the bloodstream. When blood glucose levels are too high (hyperglycemia), many serious health conditions can result. Cardiovascular disease (diseases of the heart and blood vessels) frequently accompanies diabetes because high levels of glucose act as a toxin to the lining of the blood vessels. About three quarters of people with diabetes die of cardiovascular disease.
2) Insulin and Glucose in Arteriole - GLUT4 is an insulin-regulated glucose transporter expressed primarily in muscle and fat cells. When GLUT4 cannot function properly, you develop insulin-resistance, leading to a buildup of glucose (pink) and insulin (yellow) in the bloodstream. Capillaries, the smallest blood vessels in your body, are where nutrients are transferred from blood to cells, and waste from cells to the blood. Too much glucose in the blood, a condition called hyperglycemia, leads to a number of problems including microangiopathy marked by endothelial cell apoptosis (programmed cell death), accumulation of AGEs (advanced glycation end products), and thickening of the basement membrane, which can lead to development of lesions, vasoconstriction, and altered vessel function.
3) Insulin Dispersion - Insulin is a potent hormone that has a powerful effect on many of the cells in the body. Rising glucose levels in the blood signal the pancreatic beta cells to produce and release greater amounts of insulin into the bloodstream. Without insulin, glucose would not be able to penetrate through cells' plasma membranes and enter into cell interiors. Glucose is the body's main and most vital fuel. In fact, some cells of the body, such as brain cells and red blood cells, use only glucose as fuel. Insulin causes skeletal muscle fiber cells, liver cells, fat cells, and red blood cells to take up glucose from the blood and use it for energy or store it as glycogen to prepare for energy needs, or (in the case of fat cells) use it to make fat. Insulin attaches to special sites on the cell membrane called insulin receptors. This attachment starts a long chain of events that lead to an increase in the number of glucose transporters, specialized protein molecules in the cell membrane. The glucose transporters form channels in the cell's membrane that allow glucose to enter the cell through a process called facilitated diffusion. The net result of all these insulin-mediated actions is the lowering of the glucose (blood sugar) level.
4) Insulin Dispersion with Molecular Inset - Insulin is a potent hormone that has a powerful effect on many of the cells in the body. Rising glucose levels in the blood signal the pancreatic beta cells to produce and release greater amounts of insulin into the bloodstream. Without insulin, glucose would not be able to penetrate through cells' plasma membranes and enter into cell interiors. Glucose is the body's main and most vital fuel. In fact, some cells of the body, such as brain cells and red blood cells, use only glucose as fuel. Insulin causes skeletal muscle fiber cells, liver cells, fat cells, and red blood cells to take up glucose from the blood and use it for energy or store it as glycogen to prepare for energy needs, or (in the case of fat cells) use it to make fat. Insulin attaches to special sites on the cell membrane called insulin receptors. This attachment starts a long chain of events that lead to an increase in the number of glucose transporters, specialized protein molecules in the cell membrane. The glucose transporters form channels in the cell's membrane that allow glucose to enter the cell through a process called facilitated diffusion. The net result of all these insulin-mediated actions is the lowering of the glucose (blood sugar) level.
Interactive by TheVisualMD
Healthy Nerve Supply of Clitoris and Labia
Nerve of Clitoris and Labia Damaged by Diabetes
Vasculature of Clitoris and Labia Damaged by Diabetes
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Diabetes Damages Blood Vessels in the Clitoris and Labia
Clitoris and Labia - Healthy Nerve Supply / Nerve of Damaged by Diabetes / Vasculature Damaged by Diabetes:
1) Healthy Nerve Supply - Medical visualization of a healthy nerve supply to the clitoris and labia. The female external genitalia is one of the most heavily innervated areas of the body with the glans of the clitoris being the most innervated structure in the body. Nervous stimulation of the clitoris and labia results in their swelling with blood and becoming externally lubricated all in preparation for sexual activity.
2) Nerve of Damaged by Diabetes - Medical visualization of nervous tissue damage in the clitoris and labia. Brought on by any of a number of risk factors such as diabetes, high blood pressure, obesity or smoking nervous tissue damage to the external genitalia most often results in sexual dysfunction.
3) Vasculature Damaged by Diabetes - Medical visualization of cardiovascular tissue damage in the clitoris and labia can be brought on by any of a number of risk factors such as diabetes, high blood pressure, obesity or smoking. Problems in the blood vessels just doesn't stop there. Damage to the cardiovascular system often leads to problems in the tissue that the arteries and veins service. The inability to nourish and remove wastes leads to tissue damage and necrosis. This often translates into reduced desire, decreased capacity for arousal, painful intercourse, and decreased vaginal lubrication.
Interactive by TheVisualMD
Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel
Cross-section of Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel with Normal Glucose and Insulin Levels
Cross-Section of Damaged Capillary Blood Vessel with Very High Glucose and Insulin Levels
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Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel and and Damaged Capillary Blood Vessel Caused by High Levels of Blood Glucose
1) Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel - This image depicts a healthy capillary. Capillaries are the smallest blood vessels in your body. They can be so thin in diameter that blood cells have to bend in order to pass through. Capillaries are where the transfer of nutrients from the blood to cells, and the transfer of waste from cells to blood, takes place. In a healthy body, the blood vessels are smooth and elastic.
2) Cross-Section of Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel with Normal Glucose and Insulin Levels - This image depicts a healthy capillary. The body's cells depend on sugar in the blood, which is derived from carbohydrates, for food and energy. Allowing for the innumerable differences among individuals, the threshold for a normal blood sugar (glucose, pink) level in healthy people is 100 mg/dL; that is, 100 milligrams of glucose per deciliter of blood. Lower-than-normal levels characterize hypoglycemia and higher-than-normal levels characterize hyperglycemia. Without insulin (yellow), glucose is not able to enter cells to be used as fuel. Because of this, healthy insulin levels are a key factor in keeping blood glucose levels normal.
3) Cross-Section of Damaged Capillary Blood Vessel with Very High Glucose and Insulin Levels - This image depicts an unhealthy, damaged capillary with very high levels of insulin and glucose. Higher than normal levels of blood glucose lead to hyperglycemia. Hyperglycemia is the hallmark of prediabetes (between 100 and 125 mg/dL) and diabetes (126 mg/dL and higher). It is caused by either too little insulin being released by the pancreas or the body's inability to use insulin properly. Hyperglycemia leads to microangiopathy, marked by endothelial cell apoptosis (programmed cell death), accumulation of AGEs (advanced glycation end products), and thickening of the basement membrane, which can lead to the development of lesions, vasoconstriction, and altered vessel function
Interactive by TheVisualMD
Before / After
Exercise Builds New Pathways
You can add a quarter mile of capillaries—your body’s tiniest blood vessels—to your body through training. Exercise invigorates your heart, lungs, and blood vessels. Cardiac muscle fibers strengthen each time the heart powers you through a session of cardiovascular exercise. Studies have shown that vigorous exercise stimulates the growth of new blood vessels in muscle tissue. Microscopic cross section of muscle tissue reveals how the number of blood vessels increases with exercise.
Interactive by TheVisualMD
Muscle Tissue cross-section Before Exercise / Muscle Tissue cross-section After Exercise
Muscle Tissue cross-section Before and After Exercise
This close-up image of a cross-section of muscle tissue shows the amount of blood vessels in the tissue before exercise. Blood vessels appear as white spots in this cross-section.
This close-up image of a cross-section of muscle tissue shows the amount of blood vessels in the tissue AFTER a program of regular exercise. Blood vessels appear as white spots in this cross-section.
Interactive by TheVisualMD
Lateral View
Posterior View
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Cerebral Angiography
Cerebral angiography is a procedure that uses a special dye (contrast material) and x-rays to see how blood flows through the brain. Doctors may order this test if symptoms or signs of vascular malformation (abnormal blood vessels), aneurysm (blood-filled dilation of a blood vessel), narrowing of the arteries in the brain, and vasculitis (inflammation of blood vessels) are present. Sometimes, it is also used to confirm a brain tumor, evaluate the arteries of the head and neck before surgery, and find a clot that may have caused a stroke.
Interactive by TheVisualMD
Wall of Artery / Wall of Vein
TheVisualMD
Vasodilation and Blood Vessels at Work - Dilation and Constriction
TheVisualMD
Blood Flow in Arteries
TheVisualMD
Table showing average lumen diameter, wall thickness, and relative tissue makeup of different vessel types
Pressbooks
Pulmonary circulation
Blausen Medical Communications, Inc.
Differences in Vessel Wall - left, cross section of vein, right, cross section of artery
TheVisualMD
Dual System of the Human Blood Circulation
CNX Openstax
Cardiovascular Circulation
CNX Openstax
0:11
Blood Vessel in Capillary Bed
TheVisualMD
0:12
Skull Revealing Cranial Vessel
TheVisualMD
0:11
Red Blood Cell (RBC) Flowing Through Vessel
TheVisualMD
1:07
Marvel of Blood Vessels
TheVisualMD
0:37
Capillary Bed with Blood Flow
TheVisualMD
0:37
Capillary Bed with Red Blood Cell (RBC) Flowing
TheVisualMD
0:12
Chest and Arm Blood Flow
TheVisualMD
0:14
Beating Heart Within Chest
TheVisualMD
9:30
Blood Vessels, Part 1 - Form and Function: Crash Course A&P #27
CrashCourse/YouTube
9:04
Blood Vessels, Part 2: Crash Course A&P #28
CrashCourse/YouTube
0:44
Blood Vessels In The Body - What Are Blood Vessels - Functions Of Blood Vessels
Whats Up Dude/YouTube
7:02
What is the Blood-Brain Barrier?
Neuro Transmissions/YouTube
0:10
A look at the smallest blood vessels in the eye
National Eye Institute, NIH/YouTube
0:21
Learn About How the Blood Works
NHLBI/YouTube
3:25
Microanatomy of arteries and veins (preview) - Human Anatomy | Kenhub
Kenhub - Learn Human Anatomy/YouTube
Marvel of Blood Vessels
TheVisualMD
Your blood vessels are the body's superhighway
TheVisualMD
Aging Vessels
TheVisualMD
Small blood vessels in a mouse retina
National Center for Microscopy and Imaging Research
Blood Vessels in the Brain
Ben Brahim Mohammed
Narrowed Vessels
TheVisualMD
Blood Vessel Wall Dilation
TheVisualMD
Blood Vessel Wall Constriction
TheVisualMD
Drawing of blood vessels in the penis
NIDDK Image Library
Blood vessels-3D rendering
Antonino Paolo Di Giovanna/Wikimedia
Index finger with visible blood vessels and blood drop
TheVisualMD
Index finger with Blood Vessels
TheVisualMD
Blood Vessels and red blood cells carrying oxygen in and CO2 out.
TheVisualMD
The Blood-Brain Barrier
California Institute of Technology / Emily Wyatt, Mark Davis
High Blood Pressure Damages Blood Vessels
TheVisualMD
1) Capillary within Muscle Tissue 2) Insulin and Glucose in Arteriole 3) Insulin Dispersion 4) Insulin Disper
TheVisualMD
Diabetes Damages Blood Vessels in the Clitoris and Labia
TheVisualMD
Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel and and Damaged Capillary Blood Vessel Caused by High Levels of Blood Glucose
TheVisualMD
Exercise Builds New Pathways
TheVisualMD
Muscle Tissue cross-section Before and After Exercise
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Cerebral Angiography
TheVisualMD
Shared Structures
Structure of an Artery Wall
Image by Blausen.com staff (2014). "Medical gallery of Blausen Medical 2014
Structure of an Artery Wall
Structure of an Artery Wall
Image by Blausen.com staff (2014). "Medical gallery of Blausen Medical 2014
Shared Structures
Different types of blood vessels vary slightly in their structures, but they share the same general features. Arteries and arterioles have thicker walls than veins and venules because they are closer to the heart and receive blood that is surging at a far greater pressure (image). Each type of vessel has a lumen—a hollow passageway through which blood flows. Arteries have smaller lumens than veins, a characteristic that helps to maintain the pressure of blood moving through the system. Together, their thicker walls and smaller diameters give arterial lumens a more rounded appearance in cross section than the lumens of veins.
By the time blood has passed through capillaries and entered venules, the pressure initially exerted upon it by heart contractions has diminished. In other words, in comparison to arteries, venules and veins withstand a much lower pressure from the blood that flows through them. Their walls are considerably thinner and their lumens are correspondingly larger in diameter, allowing more blood to flow with less vessel resistance. In addition, many veins of the body, particularly those of the limbs, contain valves that assist the unidirectional flow of blood toward the heart. This is critical because blood flow becomes sluggish in the extremities, as a result of the lower pressure and the effects of gravity.
The walls of arteries and veins are largely composed of living cells and their products (including collagenous and elastic fibers); the cells require nourishment and produce waste. Since blood passes through the larger vessels relatively quickly, there is limited opportunity for blood in the lumen of the vessel to provide nourishment to or remove waste from the vessel’s cells. Further, the walls of the larger vessels are too thick for nutrients to diffuse through to all of the cells. Larger arteries and veins contain small blood vessels within their walls known as the vasa vasorum—literally “vessels of the vessel”—to provide them with this critical exchange. Since the pressure within arteries is relatively high, the vasa vasorum must function in the outer layers of the vessel (see image) or the pressure exerted by the blood passing through the vessel would collapse it, preventing any exchange from occurring. The lower pressure within veins allows the vasa vasorum to be located closer to the lumen. The restriction of the vasa vasorum to the outer layers of arteries is thought to be one reason that arterial diseases are more common than venous diseases, since its location makes it more difficult to nourish the cells of the arteries and remove waste products. There are also minute nerves within the walls of both types of vessels that control the contraction and dilation of smooth muscle. These minute nerves are known as the nervi vasorum.
Both arteries and veins have the same three distinct tissue layers, called tunics (from the Latin term tunica), for the garments first worn by ancient Romans; the term tunic is also used for some modern garments. From the most interior layer to the outer, these tunics are the tunica intima, the tunica media, and the tunica externa (see image). image compares and contrasts the tunics of the arteries and veins.
Comparison of Tunics in Arteries and Veins
Arteries
Veins
General appearance
Thick walls with small lumens Generally appear rounded
Thin walls with large lumens Generally appear flattened
Tunica intima
Endothelium usually appears wavy due to constriction of smooth muscle Internal elastic membrane present in larger vessels
Normally the thickest layer in arteries Smooth muscle cells and elastic fibers predominate (the proportions of these vary with distance from the heart) External elastic membrane present in larger vessels
Normally thinner than the tunica externa Smooth muscle cells and collagenous fibers predominate Nervi vasorum and vasa vasorum present External elastic membrane absent
Tunica externa
Normally thinner than the tunica media in all but the largest arteries Collagenous and elastic fibers Nervi vasorum and vasa vasorum present
Normally the thickest layer in veins Collagenous and smooth fibers predominate Some smooth muscle fibers Nervi vasorum and vasa vasorum present
Tunica Intima
The tunica intima (also called the tunica interna) is composed of epithelial and connective tissue layers. Lining the tunica intima is the specialized simple squamous epithelium called the endothelium, which is continuous throughout the entire vascular system, including the lining of the chambers of the heart. Damage to this endothelial lining and exposure of blood to the collagenous fibers beneath is one of the primary causes of clot formation. Until recently, the endothelium was viewed simply as the boundary between the blood in the lumen and the walls of the vessels. Recent studies, however, have shown that it is physiologically critical to such activities as helping to regulate capillary exchange and altering blood flow. The endothelium releases local chemicals called endothelins that can constrict the smooth muscle within the walls of the vessel to increase blood pressure. Uncompensated overproduction of endothelins may contribute to hypertension (high blood pressure) and cardiovascular disease.
Next to the endothelium is the basement membrane, or basal lamina, that effectively binds the endothelium to the connective tissue. The basement membrane provides strength while maintaining flexibility, and it is permeable, allowing materials to pass through it. The thin outer layer of the tunica intima contains a small amount of areolar connective tissue that consists primarily of elastic fibers to provide the vessel with additional flexibility; it also contains some collagenous fibers to provide additional strength.
In larger arteries, there is also a thick, distinct layer of elastic fibers known as the internal elastic membrane (also called the internal elastic lamina) at the boundary with the tunica media. Like the other components of the tunica intima, the internal elastic membrane provides structure while allowing the vessel to stretch. It is permeated with small openings that allow exchange of materials between the tunics. The internal elastic membrane is not apparent in veins. In addition, many veins, particularly in the lower limbs, contain valves formed by sections of thickened endothelium that are reinforced with connective tissue, extending into the lumen.
Under the microscope, the lumen and the entire tunica intima of a vein will appear smooth, whereas those of an artery will normally appear wavy because of the partial constriction of the smooth muscle in the tunica media, the next layer of blood vessel walls.
Tunica Media
The tunica media is the substantial middle layer of the vessel wall (see image). It is generally the thickest layer in arteries, and it is much thicker in arteries than it is in veins. The tunica media consists of layers of smooth muscle supported by connective tissue that is primarily made up of elastic fibers, most of which are arranged in circular sheets. Toward the outer portion of the tunic, there are also layers of longitudinal muscle. Contraction and relaxation of the circular muscles decrease and increase the diameter of the vessel lumen, respectively. Specifically in arteries, vasoconstriction decreases blood flow as the smooth muscle in the walls of the tunica media contracts, making the lumen narrower and increasing blood pressure. Similarly, vasodilation increases blood flow as the smooth muscle relaxes, allowing the lumen to widen and blood pressure to drop. Both vasoconstriction and vasodilation are regulated in part by small vascular nerves, known as nervi vasorum, or “nerves of the vessel,” that run within the walls of blood vessels. These are generally all sympathetic fibers, although some trigger vasodilation and others induce vasoconstriction, depending upon the nature of the neurotransmitter and receptors located on the target cell. Parasympathetic stimulation does trigger vasodilation as well as erection during sexual arousal in the external genitalia of both sexes. Nervous control over vessels tends to be more generalized than the specific targeting of individual blood vessels. Local controls, discussed later, account for this phenomenon. (Seek additional content for more information on these dynamic aspects of the autonomic nervous system.) Hormones and local chemicals also control blood vessels. Together, these neural and chemical mechanisms reduce or increase blood flow in response to changing body conditions, from exercise to hydration. Regulation of both blood flow and blood pressure is discussed in detail later in this chapter.
The smooth muscle layers of the tunica media are supported by a framework of collagenous fibers that also binds the tunica media to the inner and outer tunics. Along with the collagenous fibers are large numbers of elastic fibers that appear as wavy lines in prepared slides. Separating the tunica media from the outer tunica externa in larger arteries is the external elastic membrane (also called the external elastic lamina), which also appears wavy in slides. This structure is not usually seen in smaller arteries, nor is it seen in veins.
Tunica Externa
The outer tunic, the tunica externa (also called the tunica adventitia), is a substantial sheath of connective tissue composed primarily of collagenous fibers. Some bands of elastic fibers are found here as well. The tunica externa in veins also contains groups of smooth muscle fibers. This is normally the thickest tunic in veins and may be thicker than the tunica media in some larger arteries. The outer layers of the tunica externa are not distinct but rather blend with the surrounding connective tissue outside the vessel, helping to hold the vessel in relative position. If you are able to palpate some of the superficial veins on your upper limbs and try to move them, you will find that the tunica externa prevents this. If the tunica externa did not hold the vessel in place, any movement would likely result in disruption of blood flow.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (11)
Microscopic anatomy of an artery
Microscopic anatomy of an artery. The outermost layer is known as tunica adventitia, and is composed of connective tissue made up of collagen fibers. Inside this layer is the tunica media, or media, which is made up of smooth muscle cells and elastic tissue (also called connective tissue proper). The innermost layer, which is in direct contact with the flow of blood, is the tunica intima, commonly called the intima. This layer is mainly made up of endothelial cells. The hollow internal cavity in which the blood flows is called the lumen.
Image by en:User:Stijn Ghesquiere, user:Drsrisenthil/Wikimedia
Artery
Diagram of an artery
Image by Kelvinsong/Wikimedia
Arterial dissection
Arterial dissection. Illustration of the normal layers of an arterial vessel (left). Dissection occurs when a tear in the intimal layer allows blood to collect between the tunica intima and tunica media, creating a false lumen (right)
Image by Nadezdha D. Kiriyak/Wikimedia
Healthy Artery
A healthy artery is flexible and supple with a minimal amount of plaque buildup within its walls. The lumen, or opening, of the artery is spacious enough for blood to course throughout the body, delivering oxygen and nutrients to tissues and transporting waste products and carbon dioxide away for disposal. This is a healthy system and promotes optimal functioning. A nutritious diet and exercise will keep arteries clear of blockages like the one in this image. Also clearly visible in this image are the three distinct layers that make up an artery's wall. The characteristics of these layers allow for the artery to have integrity yet be elastic.
Image by TheVisualMD
Cross-Section Comparisons of Healthy and Unhealthy Blood Vessels
This image shows a side-by-side comparison of healthy and unhealthy arteries. In the center of diseased vessel on the left, you can see the buildup of plaque, which is made of fatty deposits and cholesterol. Plaque reduces the flow of blood and is a sign of atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease. In the healthy, clear vessel on the right, you can see the three layers of the artery wall-the outermost layer or tunica adventitia; the middle layer or tunica media; and the inner layer or tunica intima.
Image by TheVisualMD
Healthy Artery Wall / Unhealthy Artery Wall
Artery Wall Healthy/Unhealthy Comparison
Artery walls have three basic layers, the tunica intima (inner most layer), the tunica media (middle layer), and the tunica adventitia (outer most layer). In healthy artery walls the elastic fibers within the tunica media stretch as the pressure within the artery changes. In unhealthy artery walls the normally stretchy elastic fibers within the tunica media are replaced with a less flexible material called collagen. This makes the blood vessels less able to expand.
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Artery
Healthy Artery : A healthy artery is flexible and supple, and has a minimal amount of plaque buildup within its walls.
Image by TheVisualMD
Arteries, arterioles, venules, and veins | Health & Medicine | Khan Academy
Video by khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Microanatomy of arteries and veins (preview) - Human Anatomy | Kenhub
Video by Kenhub - Learn Human Anatomy/YouTube
Blood Vessels, Part 1 - Form and Function: Crash Course A&P #27
Video by CrashCourse/YouTube
Femoral artery
Medical illustration of the human arterial system of the lower body, starting at the kidneys and going down to the feet. Labeled are the Aorta, femoral artery, popliteal artery, anterior tibial artery, and posterior tibial artery.
Cross-Section Comparisons of Healthy and Unhealthy Blood Vessels
TheVisualMD
Artery Wall Healthy/Unhealthy Comparison
TheVisualMD
Artery
TheVisualMD
7:43
Arteries, arterioles, venules, and veins | Health & Medicine | Khan Academy
khanacademymedicine/YouTube
3:25
Microanatomy of arteries and veins (preview) - Human Anatomy | Kenhub
Kenhub - Learn Human Anatomy/YouTube
9:30
Blood Vessels, Part 1 - Form and Function: Crash Course A&P #27
CrashCourse/YouTube
Femoral artery
InjuryMap/Wikimedia
Arteries
Aneurysms Explained
Image by TheVisualMD
Aneurysms Explained
Image by TheVisualMD
Arteries
An artery is a blood vessel that conducts blood away from the heart. All arteries have relatively thick walls that can withstand the high pressure of blood ejected from the heart. However, those close to the heart have the thickest walls, containing a high percentage of elastic fibers in all three of their tunics. This type of artery is known as an elastic artery (image). Vessels larger than 10 mm in diameter are typically elastic. Their abundant elastic fibers allow them to expand, as blood pumped from the ventricles passes through them, and then to recoil after the surge has passed. If artery walls were rigid and unable to expand and recoil, their resistance to blood flow would greatly increase and blood pressure would rise to even higher levels, which would in turn require the heart to pump harder to increase the volume of blood expelled by each pump (the stroke volume) and maintain adequate pressure and flow. Artery walls would have to become even thicker in response to this increased pressure. The elastic recoil of the vascular wall helps to maintain the pressure gradient that drives the blood through the arterial system. An elastic artery is also known as a conducting artery, because the large diameter of the lumen enables it to accept a large volume of blood from the heart and conduct it to smaller branches.
Farther from the heart, where the surge of blood has dampened, the percentage of elastic fibers in an artery’s tunica intima decreases and the amount of smooth muscle in its tunica media increases. The artery at this point is described as a muscular artery. The diameter of muscular arteries typically ranges from 0.1 mm to 10 mm. Their thick tunica media allows muscular arteries to play a leading role in vasoconstriction. In contrast, their decreased quantity of elastic fibers limits their ability to expand. Fortunately, because the blood pressure has eased by the time it reaches these more distant vessels, elasticity has become less important.
Notice that although the distinctions between elastic and muscular arteries are important, there is no “line of demarcation” where an elastic artery suddenly becomes muscular. Rather, there is a gradual transition as the vascular tree repeatedly branches. In turn, muscular arteries branch to distribute blood to the vast network of arterioles. For this reason, a muscular artery is also known as a distributing artery.
Stored elastic energy in large and middle sized arteries | NCLEX-RN | Khan Academy
khanacademymedicine/YouTube
0:43
The Structure of a Heart with Transposition of the Great Arteries (TGA) - CHOP
The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia/YouTube
3:58
Cardiovascular System: Coronary arteries
CTS YouTube/YouTube
7:43
Arteries, arterioles, venules, and veins | Health & Medicine | Khan Academy
khanacademymedicine/YouTube
1:49
How does your body make new arteries and veins?
British Heart Foundation/YouTube
27:51
Systemic arteries
The Noted Anatomist/YouTube
3:01
Inferior vena cava - Anatomy, Branches & Function - Human Anatomy | Kenhub
Kenhub - Learn Human Anatomy/YouTube
Arterioles
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Capillary
Image by US Government cancer.gov
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Capillary
Blood flows away from the heart to arteries, which follow into arterioles, and then narrow further into capillaries. After the tissue has beenperfused, capillaries branch and widen to become venules and then widen more and connect to become veins, which return blood to the heart.
Image by US Government cancer.gov
Arterioles
An arteriole is a very small artery that leads to a capillary. Arterioles have the same three tunics as the larger vessels, but the thickness of each is greatly diminished. The critical endothelial lining of the tunica intima is intact. The tunica media is restricted to one or two smooth muscle cell layers in thickness. The tunica externa remains but is very thin (see image).
With a lumen averaging 30 micrometers or less in diameter, arterioles are critical in slowing down—or resisting—blood flow and, thus, causing a substantial drop in blood pressure. Because of this, you may see them referred to as resistance vessels. The muscle fibers in arterioles are normally slightly contracted, causing arterioles to maintain a consistent muscle tone—in this case referred to as vascular tone—in a similar manner to the muscular tone of skeletal muscle. In reality, all blood vessels exhibit vascular tone due to the partial contraction of smooth muscle. The importance of the arterioles is that they will be the primary site of both resistance and regulation of blood pressure. The precise diameter of the lumen of an arteriole at any given moment is determined by neural and chemical controls, and vasoconstriction and vasodilation in the arterioles are the primary mechanisms for distribution of blood flow.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (8)
Venules
Illustration of blood vessels including artery, arteriole, capillaries, vein and venule.
Image by National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health
Insulin and Glucose in Arteriole
GLUT4 is an insulin-regulated glucose transporter expressed primarily in muscle and fat cells. When GLUT4 cannot function properly, you develop insulin-resistance, leading to a buildup of glucose (pink) and insulin (yellow) in the bloodstream. Capillaries, the smallest blood vessels in your body, are where nutrients are transferred from blood to cells, and waste from cells to the blood. Too much glucose in the blood, a condition called hyperglycemia, leads to a number of problems including microangiopathy marked by endothelial cell apoptosis (programmed cell death), accumulation of AGEs (advanced glycation end products), and thickening of the basement membrane, which can lead to development of lesions, vasoconstriction, and altered vessel function.
Image by TheVisualMD
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Blood Circulation Through Glomerulus
A 3D animation of blood circulation through a glomerulus. Initially the camera pans left slgihtly and rests on a close up of a glomerular capillary in cross section. Through the cross section, a stream of red blood cells travel from the top right corner of the screen to the bottom left. The camera pans out slowly as the cross section closes and reveals the podocytes surrounding the glomerular capillary. The camera continues to zoom out until we view the entire glomerulus and the efferent arteriole at the top of the screen.
Video by TheVisualMD
Cardiovascular system - Arteriole and smooth muscle cells
Arteriole and smooth muscle cells
Image by Laboratoires Servier/Wikimedia
Arterioles & Venules: Main Differences – Histology | Lecturio
Video by Lecturio Medical/YouTube
Arteries, arterioles, venules, and veins | Health & Medicine | Khan Academy
Video by khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Types of Arteries and Arterioles
Comparison of the walls of an elastic artery, a muscular artery, and an arteriole is shown. In terms of scale, the diameter of an arteriole is measured in micrometers compared to millimeters for elastic and muscular arteries.
Image by CNX Openstax
Decreased diameter of Arteriole.
Constricted blood flow.
Image by Scientific Animations, Inc.
Venules
National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health
Insulin and Glucose in Arteriole
TheVisualMD
0:34
Blood Circulation Through Glomerulus
TheVisualMD
Cardiovascular system - Arteriole and smooth muscle cells
Laboratoires Servier/Wikimedia
3:53
Arterioles & Venules: Main Differences – Histology | Lecturio
Lecturio Medical/YouTube
7:43
Arteries, arterioles, venules, and veins | Health & Medicine | Khan Academy
khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Types of Arteries and Arterioles
CNX Openstax
Decreased diameter of Arteriole.
Scientific Animations, Inc.
Capillaries
Aerobic Exercise & Capillary Growth
Image by TheVisualMD
Aerobic Exercise & Capillary Growth
Aerobic Exercise & Capillary Growth
Image by TheVisualMD
Capillaries
A capillary is a microscopic channel that supplies blood to the tissues themselves, a process called perfusion. Exchange of gases and other substances occurs in the capillaries between the blood and the surrounding cells and their tissue fluid (interstitial fluid). The diameter of a capillary lumen ranges from 5–10 micrometers; the smallest are just barely wide enough for an erythrocyte to squeeze through. Flow through capillaries is often described as microcirculation.
The wall of a capillary consists of the endothelial layer surrounded by a basement membrane with occasional smooth muscle fibers. There is some variation in wall structure: In a large capillary, several endothelial cells bordering each other may line the lumen; in a small capillary, there may be only a single cell layer that wraps around to contact itself.
For capillaries to function, their walls must be leaky, allowing substances to pass through. There are three major types of capillaries, which differ according to their degree of “leakiness:” continuous, fenestrated, and sinusoid capillaries (image).
Continuous Capillaries
The most common type of capillary, the continuous capillary, is found in almost all vascularized tissues. Continuous capillaries are characterized by a complete endothelial lining with tight junctions between endothelial cells. Although a tight junction is usually impermeable and only allows for the passage of water and ions, they are often incomplete in capillaries, leaving intercellular clefts that allow for exchange of water and other very small molecules between the blood plasma and the interstitial fluid. Substances that can pass between cells include metabolic products, such as glucose, water, and small hydrophobic molecules like gases and hormones, as well as various leukocytes. Continuous capillaries not associated with the brain are rich in transport vesicles, contributing to either endocytosis or exocytosis. Those in the brain are part of the blood-brain barrier. Here, there are tight junctions and no intercellular clefts, plus a thick basement membrane and astrocyte extensions called end feet; these structures combine to prevent the movement of nearly all substances.
Fenestrated Capillaries
A fenestrated capillary is one that has pores (or fenestrations) in addition to tight junctions in the endothelial lining. These make the capillary permeable to larger molecules. The number of fenestrations and their degree of permeability vary, however, according to their location. Fenestrated capillaries are common in the small intestine, which is the primary site of nutrient absorption, as well as in the kidneys, which filter the blood. They are also found in the choroid plexus of the brain and many endocrine structures, including the hypothalamus, pituitary, pineal, and thyroid glands.
Sinusoid Capillaries
A sinusoid capillary (or sinusoid) is the least common type of capillary. Sinusoid capillaries are flattened, and they have extensive intercellular gaps and incomplete basement membranes, in addition to intercellular clefts and fenestrations. This gives them an appearance not unlike Swiss cheese. These very large openings allow for the passage of the largest molecules, including plasma proteins and even cells. Blood flow through sinusoids is very slow, allowing more time for exchange of gases, nutrients, and wastes. Sinusoids are found in the liver and spleen, bone marrow, lymph nodes (where they carry lymph, not blood), and many endocrine glands including the pituitary and adrenal glands. Without these specialized capillaries, these organs would not be able to provide their myriad of functions. For example, when bone marrow forms new blood cells, the cells must enter the blood supply and can only do so through the large openings of a sinusoid capillary; they cannot pass through the small openings of continuous or fenestrated capillaries. The liver also requires extensive specialized sinusoid capillaries in order to process the materials brought to it by the hepatic portal vein from both the digestive tract and spleen, and to release plasma proteins into circulation.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (11)
Capillaries are the smallest vessels in the body. They distribute oxygenated blood from arteries to the tissues of the body, and return de-oxgeynated blood from the tissues to the veins.
Capillaries are the smallest vessels in the body. They distribute oxygenated blood from arteries to the tissues of the body, and return de-oxgeynated blood from the tissues to the veins. Their primary function is the exchange of materials between the blood and tissue cells. The wall of a capillary ( endothelium ), is only one cell layer thick, so that oxygen and nutrients can pass through it into the surrounding tissues.
Image by TheVisualMD
Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel
Cross-section of Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel with Normal Glucose and Insulin Levels
Cross-Section of Damaged Capillary Blood Vessel with Very High Glucose and Insulin Levels
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Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel and and Damaged Capillary Blood Vessel Caused by High Levels of Blood Glucose
1) Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel - This image depicts a healthy capillary. Capillaries are the smallest blood vessels in your body. They can be so thin in diameter that blood cells have to bend in order to pass through. Capillaries are where the transfer of nutrients from the blood to cells, and the transfer of waste from cells to blood, takes place. In a healthy body, the blood vessels are smooth and elastic.
2) Cross-Section of Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel with Normal Glucose and Insulin Levels - This image depicts a healthy capillary. The body's cells depend on sugar in the blood, which is derived from carbohydrates, for food and energy. Allowing for the innumerable differences among individuals, the threshold for a normal blood sugar (glucose, pink) level in healthy people is 100 mg/dL; that is, 100 milligrams of glucose per deciliter of blood. Lower-than-normal levels characterize hypoglycemia and higher-than-normal levels characterize hyperglycemia. Without insulin (yellow), glucose is not able to enter cells to be used as fuel. Because of this, healthy insulin levels are a key factor in keeping blood glucose levels normal.
3) Cross-Section of Damaged Capillary Blood Vessel with Very High Glucose and Insulin Levels - This image depicts an unhealthy, damaged capillary with very high levels of insulin and glucose. Higher than normal levels of blood glucose lead to hyperglycemia. Hyperglycemia is the hallmark of prediabetes (between 100 and 125 mg/dL) and diabetes (126 mg/dL and higher). It is caused by either too little insulin being released by the pancreas or the body's inability to use insulin properly. Hyperglycemia leads to microangiopathy, marked by endothelial cell apoptosis (programmed cell death), accumulation of AGEs (advanced glycation end products), and thickening of the basement membrane, which can lead to the development of lesions, vasoconstriction, and altered vessel function
Interactive by TheVisualMD
Normal Capillary Bed / Damaged Capillary Bed
Before - Normal Capillary Bed / After - Leaky Capillary Bed because of COVID-19
1) Normal Capillary Bed - This image shows normal and healthy capillary beds.
2) Leaky Capillary Bed - This image shows damaged, leaking blood vessels. The SARS-CoV-2 virus attaches to a specific molecule (called a receptor) on the surface of cells in the body. This molecule is concentrated in the lung cells but is also present on certain cells that line blood vessels in the body. The infection causes some arteries and veins to become thin, weaken, and leak. These leaks, as well as the resulting inflammation around blood vessels, can cause multiple areas of damage.
Interactive by TheVisualMD
Three types of capillaries | Circulatory system physiology | NCLEX-RN | Khan Academy
Video by khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Pre-capillary sphincters | Circulatory system physiology | NCLEX-RN | Khan Academy
Video by khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Capillary Revealing Red Blood Cell
A portion of a capillary wall has been cut away to reveal the red blood cells flowing within.
Image by TheVisualMD
Capillary with Podocyte
Colorizing the image created by a Scanning Electron Microscope. View of a podocyte wrapping around a fenestrated capillary
Image by TheVisualMD
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Blood Flowing Through Capillary
Animation showing a close up of a capillary bed, starts off out of focus and then capillary bed comes into focus showing blood flowing through the capillaries.
Video by TheVisualMD
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Constricted Capillary Causing Slow Blood Flow
A capillary coursing through tissue is constricted causing a slow down in blood flow as seen from a camera above. The capillary wall is shown as transparent to allow the viewer to see the red blood cells flowing inside.
Video by TheVisualMD
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Constricted Capillary Causing Slow Blood Flow
A capillary coursing through tissue is constricted causing a slow down in blood flow as seen from a camera off to the side. The capillary wall is shown as transparent to allow the viewer to see the red blood cells flowing inside.
Video by TheVisualMD
Diseased Glomerular Capillary Due to Hypertension
This image was reconstructed from a Scanning Electron Microscope. It shows a diseased glomerular capillary (due to hypertension) where the blood has a hard time flowing easily through the shriveled capillary walls.
Image by TheVisualMD
Capillaries are the smallest vessels in the body. They distribute oxygenated blood from arteries to the tissues of the body, and return de-oxgeynated blood from the tissues to the veins.
TheVisualMD
Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel and and Damaged Capillary Blood Vessel Caused by High Levels of Blood Glucose
TheVisualMD
Before - Normal Capillary Bed / After - Leaky Capillary Bed because of COVID-19
TheVisualMD
9:17
Three types of capillaries | Circulatory system physiology | NCLEX-RN | Khan Academy
khanacademymedicine/YouTube
4:20
Pre-capillary sphincters | Circulatory system physiology | NCLEX-RN | Khan Academy
khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Capillary Revealing Red Blood Cell
TheVisualMD
Capillary with Podocyte
TheVisualMD
0:20
Blood Flowing Through Capillary
TheVisualMD
0:16
Constricted Capillary Causing Slow Blood Flow
TheVisualMD
0:18
Constricted Capillary Causing Slow Blood Flow
TheVisualMD
Diseased Glomerular Capillary Due to Hypertension
TheVisualMD
Capillaries
Light Microscopy Image Featuring Healthy Capillaries in Fatty Tissue
Image by TheVisualMD
Light Microscopy Image Featuring Healthy Capillaries in Fatty Tissue
This image depicts healthy capillaries nestled into fatty tissue. Capillaries are the smallest blood vessels in your body. They can be so thin in diameter that blood cells have to bend in order to pass through. Capillaries are where nutrients are transferred from blood to cells and waste from cells to blood.
Image by TheVisualMD
Capillaries
Capillaries, the smallest and most numerous of the blood vessels, form the connection between the vessels that carry blood away from the heart (arteries) and the vessels that return blood to the heart (veins). The primary function of capillaries is the exchange of materials between the blood and tissue cells.
Capillary distribution varies with the metabolic activity of body tissues. Tissues such as skeletal muscle, liver, and kidney have extensive capillary networks because they are metabolically active and require an abundant supply of oxygen and nutrients. Other tissues, such as connective tissue, have a less abundant supply of capillaries. The epidermis of the skin and the lens and cornea of the eye completely lack a capillary network. About 5 percent of the total blood volume is in the systemic capillaries at any given time. Another 10 percent is in the lungs.
Smooth muscle cells in the arterioles where they branch to form capillaries regulate blood flow from the arterioles into the capillaries.
Source: National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Metarterioles and Capillary Beds
Layers (tunics) of an artery, arteriole, and capillary
Image by CCCOnline
Layers (tunics) of an artery, arteriole, and capillary
Image by CCCOnline
Metarterioles and Capillary Beds
Metarterioles and Capillary Beds
A metarteriole is a type of vessel that has structural characteristics of both an arteriole and a capillary. Slightly larger than the typical capillary, the smooth muscle of the tunica media of the metarteriole is not continuous but forms rings of smooth muscle (sphincters) prior to the entrance to the capillaries. Each metarteriole arises from a terminal arteriole and branches to supply blood to a capillary bed that may consist of 10–100 capillaries.
The precapillary sphincters, circular smooth muscle cells that surround the capillary at its origin with the metarteriole, tightly regulate the flow of blood from a metarteriole to the capillaries it supplies. Their function is critical: If all of the capillary beds in the body were to open simultaneously, they would collectively hold every drop of blood in the body and there would be none in the arteries, arterioles, venules, veins, or the heart itself. Normally, the precapillary sphincters are closed. When the surrounding tissues need oxygen and have excess waste products, the precapillary sphincters open, allowing blood to flow through and exchange to occur before closing once more (image). If all of the precapillary sphincters in a capillary bed are closed, blood will flow from the metarteriole directly into a thoroughfare channel and then into the venous circulation, bypassing the capillary bed entirely. This creates what is known as a vascular shunt. In addition, an arteriovenous anastomosis may bypass the capillary bed and lead directly to the venous system.
Although you might expect blood flow through a capillary bed to be smooth, in reality, it moves with an irregular, pulsating flow. This pattern is called vasomotion and is regulated by chemical signals that are triggered in response to changes in internal conditions, such as oxygen, carbon dioxide, hydrogen ion, and lactic acid levels. For example, during strenuous exercise when oxygen levels decrease and carbon dioxide, hydrogen ion, and lactic acid levels all increase, the capillary beds in skeletal muscle are open, as they would be in the digestive system when nutrients are present in the digestive tract. During sleep or rest periods, vessels in both areas are largely closed; they open only occasionally to allow oxygen and nutrient supplies to travel to the tissues to maintain basic life processes.
Capillary Bed
In a capillary bed, arterioles give rise to metarterioles. Precapillary sphincters located at the junction of a metarteriole with a capillary regulate blood flow. A thoroughfare channel connects the metarteriole to a venule. An arteriovenous anastomosis, which directly connects the arteriole with the venule, is shown at the bottom.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (20)
Drawing Relationship of blood capillaries and lymphatic capillaries
Relationship of blood capillaries and lymphatic capillaries. Lymphatic capillaries unite to form larger lymphatic vessels. Structurally, lymphatic vessels are similar to veins because they also have one way valves that function like gates to ensure the lymph only flows in one direction. Like veins, skeletal muscle contraction exerts pressure on the lymph vessels and forces the lymph forward through them. Lymph vessels are like one-way roads, with the lymph being collected at the capillary beds and travels through the body into the thoracic cavity. Lymph is deposited in one of two large ducts in the chest region: the right lymphatic duct and the thoracic duct. The lymph then travels from these ducts into venous circulation via the subclavian and jugular veins.
Image by Open Learning Initiative
Capillary
Diagram of a capillary
Image by Kelvinsong
Capillary
Transmission electron microscope image of a thin section cut through the pancreas(mammalian). This image shows a capillary within the pancreatic tissue(acinar cells in this image). Note the abundance of rough endoplasmic reticulum in the acinar cells. There is a red blood cell within the capillary. The capillary lining consists of long, thin endothelial cells, connected by tight junctions. The image shows fenestration of these endothelial cells. The image also shows synaptic vesicles in the neuron(nerve cell) next to the capillary.
Image by Louisa Howard
Capillary Revealing Red Blood Cell
A portion of a capillary wall has been cut away to reveal the red blood cells flowing within.
Image by TheVisualMD
Red Blood Cell Traveling Through Capillary
Red blood cells travel through a capillary, the smallest blood vessel in the body.
Image by TheVisualMD
Capillary Bed
Over 99% of the blood vessels in the body are capillaries, even though they hold less than 5% of its blood. The capillaries are so extensive that each cell in the body is within reach of one. Proximity to cells is important, as these tiny blood vessels are the key sites for exchanges of nutrients and wastes. In general, nutrients flow out of the capillary to the cells, while waste products flow from the cells into the capillaries.
Image by TheVisualMD
Damaged Capillary Bed
This image shows damaged capillaries. High blood sugar stresses and damages cells, especially the filtering capillaries in the kidneys and the capillaries in the back of your eyes. Thus, many diabetics suffer from chronic kidney disease, which then increases their blood pressure. Damage from the high blood sugar compounded with the increasing blood pressure can lead to vision loss. People with diabetes often also have high blood cholesterol that contributes to atherosclerosis, thereby increasing the risk of heart attacks, mini-strokes and strokes.
Image by TheVisualMD
Capillary Bed
In a capillary bed, arterioles give rise to metarterioles. Precapillary sphincters located at the junction of a metarteriole with a capillary regulate blood flow. A thoroughfare channel connects the metarteriole to a venule. An arteriovenous anastomosis, which directly connects the arteriole with the venule, is shown at the bottom.
Image by CNX Openstax
Types of Capillaries
The three major types of capillaries: continuous, fenestrated, and sinusoid.
Image by CNX Openstax
Capillary Exchange
Net filtration occurs near the arterial end of the capillary since capillary hydrostatic pressure (CHP) is greater than blood colloidal osmotic pressure (BCOP). There is no net movement of fluid near the midpoint since CHP = BCOP. Net reabsorption occurs near the venous end since BCOP is greater than CHP.
Image by CNX Openstax
Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel
This image depicts a healthy capillary. Capillaries are the smallest blood vessels in your body. They can be so thin in diameter that blood cells have to bend in order to pass through. Capillaries are where the transfer of nutrients from blood to cells, and the transfer of waste from cells to blood, takes place. In a healthy body, the blood vessels are smooth and elastic.
Image by TheVisualMD
Blood Vessel
Blood-brain barrier whose most important function is to keep unwanted substances from entering the brain. It is a layer consisting of the hundreds of small capillaries that supply blood to the brain. These blood vessels are lined with cells that \"screen\" the blood before it enters the brain to make certain that nothing harmful gets in. Antidepressants have been designed to cross this barrier.
Image by TheVisualMD
Blood within Blood Vessel
There are 20-30 trillion red blood cells (RBCs) in an adult's body. The lifespan of RBCs, which are produced in bone marrow, is about 100 days, which means that 2 million die (and are replaced) each second, but in that short lifetime they can make 75,000 round trips between lungs, heart and tissues in the body. The cardiovascular system is a vast network of arteries, veins and vessels that would extend 60,000 miles if stretched end-to-end. The smallest capillaries (from Latin for \"hairlike\") are so narrow that RBCs must pass through in single file.
Image by TheVisualMD
Collecting Tubule and Capillary of Kidney
Medical visualization of a cross-section view of a collecting tubule and capillary in the kidney. The remaining salts, sugars and water that are not reabsorbed into the surrounding veins and arteries are passed through a collecting tubule to travel to the urinary bladder.
Image by TheVisualMD
Cross-Section of Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel with High Glucose and Insulin Levels
This image depicts a healthy capillary. Capillaries, the smallest blood vessels in your body, are where nutrients are transferred from blood to cells, and waste from cells to blood. The body's cells depend on sugar in the blood, which is derived from carbohydrates, for food and energy. Allowing for the innumerable differences among individuals, the threshold for a normal blood-sugar (glucose, pink) level in healthy people is 100 mg/dL; that is, 100 milligrams of glucose per deciliter of blood. Lower-than-normal levels characterize hypoglycemia and higher than normal levels characterize hyperglycemia. Without insulin (yellow), glucose is not able to enter cells to be used as fuel. Because of this, healthy insulin levels are a key factor in keeping blood glucose levels normal.
Image by TheVisualMD
Normal Blood Glucose Levels in Capillary
This image depicts a healthy capillary with normal glucose (pink) and insulin (yellow) levels. Capillaries, the smallest blood vessels in your body, are where nutrients are transferred from blood to cells, and waste from cells to blood. The body's cells depend on sugar in the blood, which is derived from carbohydrates, for food and energy. Allowing for the innumerable differences among individuals, the threshold for a normal blood-sugar (glucose) level in healthy people is 100 mg/dL; that is, 100 milligrams of glucose per deciliter of blood. Lower-than-normal levels characterize hypoglycemia and higher than normal levels characterize hyperglycemia.
Image by TheVisualMD
Low Blood Glucose Levels in Capillary
This image depicts a capillary with low levels of glucose (pink). Capillaries, the smallest blood vessels in your body, are where nutrients are transferred from blood to cells, and waste from cells to blood. The body's cells depend on sugar in the blood, which is derived from carbohydrates, for food and energy. Allowing for the innumerable differences among individuals, the threshold for a normal blood-sugar (glucose) level in healthy people is 100 mg/dL; that is, 100 milligrams of glucose per deciliter of blood. Lower-than-normal levels characterize hypoglycemia and higher than normal levels characterize hyperglycemia.
Image by TheVisualMD
Cross-section of Unhealthy Capillary Blood Vessel with High Glucose and Insulin Levels
This image depicts an unhealthy capillary with high levels of insulin and glucose. Capillaries, the smallest blood vessels in your body, are where nutrients are transferredfrom blood to cells and waste from cells to blood. The cells of the body depend on sugar in the blood, which is derived from carbohydrates, for food and energy. Allowing for the innumerable differences among individuals, the threshold for a normal blood-sugar (glucose) level in healthy people is 100 mg/dL; that is, 100 milligrams of glucose per deciliter of blood. Higher than normal levels lead to hyperglycemia. Hyperglycemia is the hallmark of prediabetes (between 100 and 125 mg/dL) and diabetes (126 mg/dL and higher). It is caused by either too little insulin being released by the pancreas or the body's inability to use insulin properly. Hyperglycemia leads to microangiopathy, marked by endothelial cell apoptosis (programmed cell death), accumulation of AGEs (advanced glycation end products), and thickening of the basement membrane, which can lead to development of lesions, vasoconstriction, and altered vessel function.
Image by TheVisualMD
Cross-Section of Damaged Capillary Blood Vessel with Very High Glucose and Insulin Levels
This image depicts an unhealthy, damaged capillary with very high levels of insulin and glucose. Capillaries, the smallest blood vessels in your body, are where nutrients are transferredfrom blood to cells and waste from cells to blood. The cells of the body depend on sugar in the blood, which is derived from carbohydrates, for food and energy. Allowing for the innumerable differences among individuals, the threshold for a normal blood-sugar (glucose) level in healthy people is 100 mg/dL; that is, 100 milligrams of glucose per deciliter of blood. Higher than normal levels lead to hyperglycemia. Hyperglycemia is the hallmark of prediabetes (between 100 and 125 mg/dL) and diabetes (126 mg/dL and higher). It is caused by either too little insulin being released by the pancreas or the body's inability to use insulin properly. Hyperglycemia leads to microangiopathy, marked by endothelial cell apoptosis (programmed cell death), accumulation of AGEs (advanced glycation end products), and thickening of the basement membrane, which can lead to development of lesions, vasoconstriction, and altered vessel function.
Image by TheVisualMD
Capillary Bed
Illustration from Anatomy & Physiology, Connexions Web site. http://cnx.org/content/col11496/1.6/, Jun 19, 2013.
Image by OpenStax College
Drawing Relationship of blood capillaries and lymphatic capillaries
Open Learning Initiative
Capillary
Kelvinsong
Capillary
Louisa Howard
Capillary Revealing Red Blood Cell
TheVisualMD
Red Blood Cell Traveling Through Capillary
TheVisualMD
Capillary Bed
TheVisualMD
Damaged Capillary Bed
TheVisualMD
Capillary Bed
CNX Openstax
Types of Capillaries
CNX Openstax
Capillary Exchange
CNX Openstax
Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel
TheVisualMD
Blood Vessel
TheVisualMD
Blood within Blood Vessel
TheVisualMD
Collecting Tubule and Capillary of Kidney
TheVisualMD
Cross-Section of Healthy Capillary Blood Vessel with High Glucose and Insulin Levels
TheVisualMD
Normal Blood Glucose Levels in Capillary
TheVisualMD
Low Blood Glucose Levels in Capillary
TheVisualMD
Cross-section of Unhealthy Capillary Blood Vessel with High Glucose and Insulin Levels
TheVisualMD
Cross-Section of Damaged Capillary Blood Vessel with Very High Glucose and Insulin Levels
TheVisualMD
Capillary Bed
OpenStax College
Venules
Capillary
Image by Community Emergency Response Team
Capillary
Types of Bleeding
Image by Community Emergency Response Team
Venules
A venule is an extremely small vein, generally 8–100 micrometers in diameter. Postcapillary venules join multiple capillaries exiting from a capillary bed. Multiple venules join to form veins. The walls of venules consist of endothelium, a thin middle layer with a few muscle cells and elastic fibers, plus an outer layer of connective tissue fibers that constitute a very thin tunica externa (image). Venules as well as capillaries are the primary sites of emigration or diapedesis, in which the white blood cells adhere to the endothelial lining of the vessels and then squeeze through adjacent cells to enter the tissue fluid.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (2)
Venules
Illustration of blood vessels including artery, arteriole, capillaries, vein and venule.
Image by National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health
Arteries, arterioles, venules, and veins | Health & Medicine | Khan Academy
Video by khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Venules
National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health
7:43
Arteries, arterioles, venules, and veins | Health & Medicine | Khan Academy
khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Veins
Wall of Vein
Image by TheVisualMD
Wall of Vein
Like arteries, veins are also made of three layers. However, veins do not contract like arteries. Veins in the lower part of your body have one-way valves to counteract the effects of gravity and prevent blood from flowing back into the feet. Veins in the upper part of the body have no valves because gravity itself brings the blood back \"down\" to the heart. Unfortunately, valves can be damaged and weakened over time. Varicose veins are caused by leaky valves that allow blood to pool and bulge in the veins of the legs.
Image by TheVisualMD
Veins
A vein is a blood vessel that conducts blood toward the heart. Compared to arteries, veins are thin-walled vessels with large and irregular lumens (see image). Because they are low-pressure vessels, larger veins are commonly equipped with valves that promote the unidirectional flow of blood toward the heart and prevent backflow toward the capillaries caused by the inherent low blood pressure in veins as well as the pull of gravity. image compares the features of arteries and veins.
Comparison of Veins and Venules
Many veins have valves to prevent back flow of blood, whereas venules do not. In terms of scale, the diameter of a venule is measured in micrometers compared to millimeters for veins.
Comparison of Arteries and Veins
Arteries
Veins
Direction of blood flow
Conducts blood away from the heart
Conducts blood toward the heart
General appearance
Rounded
Irregular, often collapsed
Pressure
High
Low
Wall thickness
Thick
Thin
Relative oxygen concentration
Higher in systemic arteries Lower in pulmonary arteries
Lower in systemic veins Higher in pulmonary veins
Valves
Not present
Present most commonly in limbs and in veins inferior to the heart
Disorders of the…
Cardiovascular System: Edema and Varicose Veins Despite the presence of valves and the contributions of other anatomical and physiological adaptations we will cover shortly, over the course of a day, some blood will inevitably pool, especially in the lower limbs, due to the pull of gravity. Any blood that accumulates in a vein will increase the pressure within it, which can then be reflected back into the smaller veins, venules, and eventually even the capillaries. Increased pressure will promote the flow of fluids out of the capillaries and into the interstitial fluid. The presence of excess tissue fluid around the cells leads to a condition called edema.
Most people experience a daily accumulation of tissue fluid, especially if they spend much of their work life on their feet (like most health professionals). However, clinical edema goes beyond normal swelling and requires medical treatment. Edema has many potential causes, including hypertension and heart failure, severe protein deficiency, renal failure, and many others. In order to treat edema, which is a sign rather than a discrete disorder, the underlying cause must be diagnosed and alleviated.
Varicose Veins
Varicose veins are commonly found in the lower limbs. (credit: Thomas Kriese)
Edema may be accompanied by varicose veins, especially in the superficial veins of the legs (image). This disorder arises when defective valves allow blood to accumulate within the veins, causing them to distend, twist, and become visible on the surface of the integument. Varicose veins may occur in both sexes, but are more common in women and are often related to pregnancy. More than simple cosmetic blemishes, varicose veins are often painful and sometimes itchy or throbbing. Without treatment, they tend to grow worse over time. The use of support hose, as well as elevating the feet and legs whenever possible, may be helpful in alleviating this condition. Laser surgery and interventional radiologic procedures can reduce the size and severity of varicose veins. Severe cases may require conventional surgery to remove the damaged vessels. As there are typically redundant circulation patterns, that is, anastomoses, for the smaller and more superficial veins, removal does not typically impair the circulation. There is evidence that patients with varicose veins suffer a greater risk of developing a thrombus or clot.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (17)
Structure of a venous valve
Although all three tunics are present in veins, the tunica interna and tunica media are quite thin, and both the internal and external elastic laminae are absent, or very thin. These features render the veins capable of great expansion to hold the variable volume of blood passing through them. At any given time, there is three times as much blood volume in the venous system than there is in the arterial system. However, veins are not designed to handle the high blood pressure commonly found in arteries. Due to the relatively large lumen and thin walls, veins will appear flattened in a micrograph since the vessel collapses when it is not filled with blood.
Blood pressure in the venous system is much lower than blood pressure in the arterial system (10 mm Hg compared to 90–100 mm Hg). Therefore, the flow of blood back to the heart from the capillary networks, called venous return, cannot depend on pressure alone. One feature of veins that augments venous return is the presence of venous valves within the vessels, most commonly in the limbs. The valves of veins are formed by extensions of the tunica interna that form flaps into the vessel lumen. These valves close when blood in a vein tries to move backward, away from the heart. The closed valve forms a barrier to the backward flow of blood.
Image by Open Learning Initiative - CCCOnline
Differences in Vessel Wall - left, cross section of vein, right, cross section of artery
Medical visualization of a vein and artery. Superficially, arteries and veins look alike. Running parallel, they have about the same thickness. But structurally they differ. Arteries (right), carrying oxygen-rich blood from the heart to the tissues under high pressure, have in their walls a wide middle layer of muscle fibers and elastic tissue, which allows them to expand and recoil as the heart contracts. Veins (left), on the other hand, transport spent blood back to the heart under low pressure. They have thinner walls, making them more susceptible to contractions in surrounding muscles and a succession of valve flaps to prevent back flow.
Image by TheVisualMD
Veins of the Head and Neck
Head and Neck Veins
Image by OpenStax College
Lower Limb Veins Anterior Posterior
Veins of the right arm of a man.
Image by OpenStax College
Systemic Veins
Overview of Systemic Veins
Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images
Veins
Veins of the right arm of a man.
Image by Colin Davis from Chicago, United States
Veins of the Upper Limbs
This anterior view shows the veins that drain the upper limb.
Image by OpenStax College
Veins
Skeletal Muscle Vein Pump
Image by OpenStax College
Veins
Structure of a vein, which consists of three main layers. The outer layer is connective tissue, called tunica adventitia or tunica externa; a middle layer of smooth musclecalled the tunica media, and the inner layer lined with endothelial cells called the tunica intima.
Image by Kelvinsong
Major Systemic Veins of the Body
The major systemic veins of the body are shown here in an anterior view.
Image by CNX Openstax
Veins of the Thoracic and Abdominal Regions
Veins of the thoracic and abdominal regions drain blood from the area above the diaphragm, returning it to the right atrium via the superior vena cava.
Image by CNX Openstax
Rotating view of heart, veins and arteries of the human body
Rotating view of heart, veins and arteries of the human body
Image by BodyParts3D/Anatomography
Simplified diagram of the human Circulatory system in anterior view.
Simplified diagram of the human Circulatory system in anterior view.
Image by LadyofHats, Mariana Ruiz Villarreal
Artery Vein Capillary Comparison
Comparison of the structure of the cross section of an artery, capillary and vein.
Image by Christinelmiller/Wikimedia
Cardiovascular system - Vein Valves
Vein
Image by Laboratoires Servier
/Wikimedia
202104 Arteries and veins
Arteries and veins
Image by DataBase Center for Life Science (DBCLS)/Wikimedia
Vein-crosssection-no-text
Piirros laskimosta ja laskimoläpästä
Image by /Wikimedia
Structure of a venous valve
Open Learning Initiative - CCCOnline
Differences in Vessel Wall - left, cross section of vein, right, cross section of artery
TheVisualMD
Veins of the Head and Neck
OpenStax College
Lower Limb Veins Anterior Posterior
OpenStax College
Systemic Veins
Clker-Free-Vector-Images
Veins
Colin Davis from Chicago, United States
Veins of the Upper Limbs
OpenStax College
Veins
OpenStax College
Veins
Kelvinsong
Major Systemic Veins of the Body
CNX Openstax
Veins of the Thoracic and Abdominal Regions
CNX Openstax
Rotating view of heart, veins and arteries of the human body
BodyParts3D/Anatomography
Simplified diagram of the human Circulatory system in anterior view.
LadyofHats, Mariana Ruiz Villarreal
Artery Vein Capillary Comparison
Christinelmiller/Wikimedia
Cardiovascular system - Vein Valves
Laboratoires Servier
/Wikimedia
202104 Arteries and veins
DataBase Center for Life Science (DBCLS)/Wikimedia
Vein-crosssection-no-text
/Wikimedia
Veins
Veins
Image by Nevit Dilmen (talk)
Veins
Venous valve popliteal vein Lower extremity. Open and close during blood flow. Venous valves prevent reverse blood flow.
Image by Nevit Dilmen (talk)
Veins
Veins carry blood toward the heart. After blood passes through the capillaries, it enters the smallest veins, called venules. From the venules, it flows into progressively larger and larger veins until it reaches the heart. In the pulmonary circuit, the pulmonary veins transport blood from the lungs to the left atrium of the heart. This blood has a high oxygen content because it has just been oxygenated in the lungs. Systemic veins transport blood from the body tissue to the right atrium of the heart. This blood has a reduced oxygen content because the oxygen has been used for metabolic activities in the tissue cells.
The walls of veins have the same three layers as the arteries. Although all the layers are present, there is less smooth muscle and connective tissue. This makes the walls of veins thinner than those of arteries, which is related to the fact that blood in the veins has less pressure than in the arteries. Because the walls of the veins are thinner and less rigid than arteries, veins can hold more blood. Almost 70 percent of the total blood volume is in the veins at any given time. Medium and large veins have venous valves, similar to the semilunar valves associated with the heart, that help keep the blood flowing toward the heart. Venous valves are especially important in the arms and legs, where they prevent the backflow of blood in response to the pull of gravity.
Source: National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Additional Materials (2)
Arteries vs. veins-what's the difference? | Circulatory system physiology | NCLEX-RN | Khan Academy
Video by Khan Academy/YouTube
Veins of the body - PART 1 - Anatomy Tutorial
Video by AnatomyZone/YouTube
7:44
Arteries vs. veins-what's the difference? | Circulatory system physiology | NCLEX-RN | Khan Academy
Khan Academy/YouTube
8:59
Veins of the body - PART 1 - Anatomy Tutorial
AnatomyZone/YouTube
Veins as Blood Reservoirs
Arteries and Veins
Image by TheVisualMD
Arteries and Veins
The body's blood vessels, consisting of arteries, veins, and capillaries, range in size from arteries as wide as a garden hose to capillaries so thin that it would take 10 of them, lined up side by side, to form the thickness of a human hair. But they all have one thing in common: they are designed to move blood as quickly and efficiently as possible. That means they need to be strong, flexible, and smooth. Even the components of your blood, like red blood cells, platelets, and white blood cells, are designed for movement. Red blood cells can actually flex so that they are able to flow through the finest of capillaries. The high levels of glucose characteristic of diabetes damage both large and small blood vessels. Too much glucose acts as a toxin to the lining of the blood vessels and injures both large vessels (arteries) and small vessels (capillaries). Damage to blood vessels is something that all the main complications of diabetes have in common. Many cells in the body, such as those of the skeletal muscles and liver, require insulin to admit glucose. This isn't true of the cells that line blood vessels, called endothelial cells. They can't restrict their glucose intake. When levels of blood glucose are very high, these cells develop high glucose levels as well. The high glucose levels start a whole chain of events inside the cells that damages them in numerous ways. About three quarters of people with diabetes die of cardiovascular disease-diseases of the heart and blood vessels.
Image by TheVisualMD
Veins as Blood Reservoirs
In addition to their primary function of returning blood to the heart, veins may be considered blood reservoirs, since systemic veins contain approximately 64 percent of the blood volume at any given time (image). Their ability to hold this much blood is due to their high capacitance, that is, their capacity to distend (expand) readily to store a high volume of blood, even at a low pressure. The large lumens and relatively thin walls of veins make them far more distensible than arteries; thus, they are said to be capacitance vessels.
Distribution of Blood Flow
When blood flow needs to be redistributed to other portions of the body, the vasomotor center located in the medulla oblongata sends sympathetic stimulation to the smooth muscles in the walls of the veins, causing constriction—or in this case, venoconstriction. Less dramatic than the vasoconstriction seen in smaller arteries and arterioles, venoconstriction may be likened to a “stiffening” of the vessel wall. This increases pressure on the blood within the veins, speeding its return to the heart. As you will note in Figure, approximately 21 percent of the venous blood is located in venous networks within the liver, bone marrow, and integument. This volume of blood is referred to as venous reserve. Through venoconstriction, this “reserve” volume of blood can get back to the heart more quickly for redistribution to other parts of the circulation.
When blood flow needs to be redistributed to other portions of the body, the vasomotor center located in the medulla oblongata sends sympathetic stimulation to the smooth muscles in the walls of the veins, causing constriction—or in this case, venoconstriction. Less dramatic than the vasoconstriction seen in smaller arteries and arterioles, venoconstriction may be likened to a “stiffening” of the vessel wall. This increases pressure on the blood within the veins, speeding its return to the heart. As you will note in image, approximately 21 percent of the venous blood is located in venous networks within the liver, bone marrow, and integument. This volume of blood is referred to as venous reserve. Through venoconstriction, this “reserve” volume of blood can get back to the heart more quickly for redistribution to other parts of the circulation.
Career Connection
Vascular Surgeons and Technicians Vascular surgery is a specialty in which the physician deals primarily with diseases of the vascular portion of the cardiovascular system. This includes repair and replacement of diseased or damaged vessels, removal of plaque from vessels, minimally invasive procedures including the insertion of venous catheters, and traditional surgery. Following completion of medical school, the physician generally completes a 5-year surgical residency followed by an additional 1 to 2 years of vascular specialty training. In the United States, most vascular surgeons are members of the Society of Vascular Surgery.
Vascular technicians are specialists in imaging technologies that provide information on the health of the vascular system. They may also assist physicians in treating disorders involving the arteries and veins. This profession often overlaps with cardiovascular technology, which would also include treatments involving the heart. Although recognized by the American Medical Association, there are currently no licensing requirements for vascular technicians, and licensing is voluntary. Vascular technicians typically have an Associate’s degree or certificate, involving 18 months to 2 years of training. The United States Bureau of Labor projects this profession to grow by 29 percent from 2010 to 2020.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (6)
cerebral blood vessels neurons and plaques
cerebral blood vessels neurons and plaques
Image by TheVisualMD
Venous system
simplified diagram of the human venous system in anterior view.
Image by LadyofHats, Mariana Ruiz Villarreal
Arterioles & Venules: Main Differences – Histology | Lecturio
Video by Lecturio Medical/YouTube
Drawing of blood flowing through a normal blood vessel, blood flowing through a narrowed blood vessel, and too much blood flowing through a normal blood vessel.
Blood pressure is the force of blood pushing against blood vessel walls as the heart pumps out blood.
Image by NIDDK Image Library
Drawing of blood flowing through a normal blood vessel, blood flowing through a narrowed blood vessel, and too much blood flowing through a normal blood vessel without labels
Blood pressure is the force of blood pushing against blood vessel walls as the heart pumps out blood.
Image by NIDDK Image Library
Blood vessels-en
Diagram of arteries, veins, and capillaries. Also shows cross-sectional area differences. Aligned to 720 × 496 px grid.
Based on [1], [2], a diagram in my Biology textbook, and some others.
Image by Kelvinsong/Wikimedia
cerebral blood vessels neurons and plaques
TheVisualMD
Venous system
LadyofHats, Mariana Ruiz Villarreal
3:53
Arterioles & Venules: Main Differences – Histology | Lecturio
Lecturio Medical/YouTube
Drawing of blood flowing through a normal blood vessel, blood flowing through a narrowed blood vessel, and too much blood flowing through a normal blood vessel.
NIDDK Image Library
Drawing of blood flowing through a normal blood vessel, blood flowing through a narrowed blood vessel, and too much blood flowing through a normal blood vessel without labels
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Structure and Function of Blood Vessels
Blood pumped by the heart flows through a series of vessels known as arteries, arterioles, capillaries, venules, and veins before returning to the heart.