Arteries are connected to veins through capillary beds in the body tissues.
Yes of coarse Arterie= oxygenated blood Vein= deoxygenated blood Capillarie= link to the vein from arterie
Arterie
Pulmanry arterie
Vena Cava
pulmonary arterie
the gastrosplenic vein joins the superior mesenteric vein and takes blood to the hepatic vein
Blood-vein was created in 1931.
The PULMONARY vein. Pulmonary = lungs. Vein = ALWAYS carries blood TO the heart.
They run parallel to each other in the neck with the internal jugular vein on the outside which works like a protector in case of injury to the area. If you are stabbed in the neck and it only penetrates the vein you would bleed out slower than if you were caught in the common corotid arterie which has the close too highest blood pressure pushing it up in the body. The internal jugular vein has a much lower blood pressure as it is the last place the blood travels to prior to going back to the heart from the head. The common carotid artery divides into two branches which supply oxygenated blood to the head (face, brain, and everything in between) from the aorta. The internal jugular vein takes the deoxygenated blood from the head back to the heart via the brachiocephalic vein and then the Superior Vena Cava.
Gastrosplenic Vein joins the Superior Mesenteric Vein and takes blood to Hepatic Portal Vein and delivers blood to liver.
the blood that carries blood from your heart is your arteries
There are two veins that carry oxygen they are the Pulmonary vein and the Umbilical vein:-)