Deeper and pulsatile.
Yes, because there is more pressure in the artery than in the vein so the artery has to be big enough to hold the pressure that's inside it.
it is a VEIN <3
segmental artery, renal artery, renal vein, arcule vein, interlobular vein, interlobular artery
the wall of an artery is usuallythicker that the wall of a vein.
left ventricle, aortic semilunar valve, ascending aorta, aoric arch, brachiocephalic artery, right subclavian artery, axillary artery, brachial artery, radial/ulnar artery, superficial palmar artery. medial vein of forearm, radial/cubital vein, basilic vein, brachial vein, axillary vein, subclavian vein, brachiocephalic vein, superior vena cava, heart (right atrium)
Yes, because there is more pressure in the artery than in the vein so the artery has to be big enough to hold the pressure that's inside it.
Because there is more pressure on the artery wall (from the heart) than that of the vein.
it is a VEIN <3
Artery.
there is no such animal as an artery vein.... you have artery and you have veins... no vessel is both, unless used in a CABG.
It's a vein. The artery going to your head is the carotid artery.
the smallest blood vessel is the capillary, then the vein, and the artery. (vein and artery depends though because when they diffuse they get smaller and close to the same size) but the smallest will always be the capillary.
segmental artery, renal artery, renal vein, arcule vein, interlobular vein, interlobular artery
the wall of an artery is usuallythicker that the wall of a vein.
artery
because it is the other way round...it is connected to the veinrather than the artery.
in our body there are both, pulmonary artery and pulmonary vein