Sunday, June 18, 2023

Blood Vessels in Man

 

Blood Vessels in Man

 

In Man with closed circulatory systems, the blood flows within vessels of varying sizes. All vertebrates, including humans, possess this type of circulation.

 

The external structure of the heart has many blood vessels that form a network, with other major vessels emerging from within the structure.

 

The blood vessels typically comprise the following:

 

Veins supply deoxygenated blood to the heart via inferior and superior vena cava, and it eventually drains into the right atrium.

Capillaries are tiny, tube-like vessels which form a network between the arteries to veins.

Arteries are muscular-walled tubes mainly involved in supplying oxygenated blood away from the heart to all other parts of the body. Aorta is the largest of the arteries and it branches off into various smaller arteries throughout the body.

There are certain important arteries and veins which are present in heart and are as follows:

•Inferior vena cava: It brings deoxygenated blood from lower part of the body to the right atrium.

•Superior vena cava: It brings deoxygenated blood from upper part of the body to the right atrium.

•Pulmonary artery: Right ventricle pumps deoxygenated blood into pulmonary artery and this artery carries this deoxygenated blood to the lungs for purification.

•Pulmonary vein: It carries oxygenated blood from lungs and transfers it to left atrium.

•Aorta: It receives oxygenated blood from the left ventricle and then transfers this blood to other arteries which circulate that oxygenated blood to all other body parts.

A separation also remains present between left and right portion of heart which we call as septum. This septum separates the left and right chambers of heart and thus prevents mixing of deoxygenated and oxygenated blood.

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.

The tunica intima (also called the tunica interna) is composed of epithelial and connective tissue layers.

The tunica media is the substantial middle layer of the vessel wall. It is generally the thickest layer in arteries.

The outer tunic, the tunica externa (also called the tunica adventitia), is a substantial sheath of connective tissue composed primarily of collagenous fibers. 

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.

Capillaries

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.

Veins

vein is a blood vessel that conducts blood toward the heart. Compared to arteries, veins are thin-walled vessels with large and irregular lumens 

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.

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.


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.


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