Peritubular capillaries
the flow of blood through the nephron is : enters through the afferent arteriole, then flows through the glomerulus and into the efferent arteriole. Blood then enters the peritubular capillaries and the vasa recta and then flows through the cortex and medulla of the kidneys close to the tubules Answer: so the flow is afferent arteriole, efferent arteriole, peritubular capillaries, vasa recta
Blood flows through the kidneys in the following systematic way. It flows from Renal Artery to segmental artery to lobar artery to interlobar artery to arculate artery to interlobular artery to afferent arteriole to glomerular capillaries to efferent arteriole to peritubular capillaries to vasa recta to interlobular vein to arcuate vein to interlobar vein and finally to the renal vein.
The average velocity of the blood as it flows through a capillary is 0.00047 m/s.
That's what I want to know.
Capillaries is the answer in this question
The blood flows from the left ventricle into elastic arteries (aortic trunk), then to the muscular arteries (external carotid artery), then to arterioles, then to the capillary beds.
Blood flows slowly through capillaries. This speed allows for increased efficiency of diffusion of materials.
Blood flows from arteries to veins or from arterioles (small arteries) to venules (small veins) in a capillary bed.
The capillarys are in the lungs and blood flows trough them.As far as I know, blood does not flow back through the capillarys so it most likely does not flow back through the capillary beds.
In a portal system, blood flows from a capillary bed through veins to another capillary bed. It differs from normal venous return because it is not taken straight to the heart.
Generally speaking, the Left Coronary Artery flows to the Anterior Inter-ventricular Artery, which is located at the Apex of the heart. It then De-oxygenates in the capillary beds where it flows to the Great Cardiac Vein.Finally blood flows to the Coronary sinus which immediately enters the Right Atrium.
The drop of blood would move from the small intestine into the superior mesenteric vein, through the hepatic portal vein, to the liver, then hepatic veins, into the inferior vena cava and then into the right atrium.