There are three types: arteries carry blood away from the heart, veins carry blood back to the heart, and capillaries connect them and allow exchange with tissues.
Check: What are the three types of blood vessel and their basic functions?
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There are three types: arteries carry blood away from the heart, veins carry blood back to the heart, and capillaries connect them and allow exchange with tissues.
Check: What are the three types of blood vessel and their basic functions?
Arteries have thick, muscular, elastic walls to withstand high pressure from the heart's pumping. They carry oxygenated blood (except the pulmonary artery). Blood flows in pulses you can feel as your pulse.
Check: Why do arteries need thick walls?
Veins have thinner walls than arteries and contain valves to prevent backflow. Blood pressure is lower, so they rely on muscle contractions to help push blood back to the heart.
Check: Why do veins have valves but arteries don't?
Capillaries are tiny - only one cell thick. This thin wall allows oxygen and nutrients to pass out to tissues, and carbon dioxide and waste to pass in. This is where the real exchange happens.
Check: Why are capillary walls only one cell thick?
Blood vessels are the tubes that carry blood around your body. If you could lay all your blood vessels end to end, they would stretch about 100,000 kilometres - enough to go around the Earth twice! There are three types, each with a different structure suited to its function.
Arteries carry blood away from the heart. Remember: Arteries = Away.
Veins carry blood back towards the heart.
Capillaries are tiny blood vessels that connect arteries to veins. This is where the important exchange happens.
Understanding blood vessels helps doctors diagnose and treat conditions like varicose veins (when valves fail), atherosclerosis (narrowing of arteries), and high blood pressure. When you understand how blood flows, you can understand why lifestyle choices affect your cardiovascular health.
When you press your fingers on your wrist or neck, you can feel your pulse. This is blood being pushed through arteries with each heartbeat. The artery walls stretch as blood surges through, then spring back. You're actually feeling the elastic walls of the artery expanding and contracting. You can't feel a pulse in veins because the pressure is too low.
Some people develop bulging, twisted veins in their legs called varicose veins. This happens when the valves in leg veins stop working properly. Without functioning valves, blood pools in the veins instead of flowing back to the heart. Standing for long periods makes this worse because gravity pulls blood downwards. Walking helps because muscle contractions squeeze the veins.
When a nurse takes blood for testing, they usually take it from a vein in your arm. They use veins rather than arteries because veins are closer to the surface, have lower pressure (so it's safer), and heal more easily. They often put a band around your upper arm first - this temporarily stops blood flowing, making the vein easier to find.
When you exercise, your muscles need more oxygen. Your capillaries respond by dilating (widening) to allow more blood flow. Near the skin surface, this increased blood flow makes you look flushed or red. This is also how your body releases heat - blood carries warmth to the skin where it can escape.
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Remember: Arteries carry blood Away from the heart. Veins carry blood back to the heart. Don't confuse this with oxygenated/deoxygenated blood - the pulmonary artery carries deoxygenated blood away from the heart to the lungs.
The pulmonary artery is the exception - it carries deoxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs. Similarly, the pulmonary vein carries oxygenated blood. Arteries and veins are defined by direction of flow, not oxygen content.
Students often state that capillary walls are one cell thick without explaining why. The thin walls allow diffusion - oxygen and nutrients can pass out to tissues, while carbon dioxide and waste pass in. If capillary walls were thick, this exchange couldn't happen.
Both prevent backflow, but they're different structures. Vein valves are small flaps along the vessel length, needed because blood pressure is low. Heart valves are between chambers and at exits to arteries. Arteries don't have valves because blood pressure is high enough already.