Arteries have the highest blood pressure out of the three because arteries carry oxygen rich cells which then loses some of its pressure as it goes further away from the heart.
Where blood pressure is lowest would be from the capillaries to the veins because after all the rich oxygenated cells are taken out of the cell and replaced with waste and CO2, the blood pressure becomes much lower. (Also because it is further away from the heart.
I'm not quite sure what your question is, but there is a significant difference in the two. Blood pressure, the one that you're used to hearing (120/80) is the measured arterial blood pressure. The venous pressure is very low, compared to the arterial pressure because the blood passes through the arteries, into the capilaries, and is essentially sucked back to the heart.
The answer is: through capillaries
At the post capillary venues, the blood pressure is about 16mmHg. It generally deceases as it move back to the heart. As it enters the right atrium is under no pressure.
It will decrease.
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Yes
it makes poo
Proceeding downstream from the aorta, branching of arterial vessels increases total cross-sectional area and thus results in diminished velocity of blood flow from the aorta to the capillaries. Velocity increases from the capillaries to the large veins with the confluence of vessels and the resulting decrease in total cross-sectional area. :)
Veins are where the blood flow is the slowest. Blood flow velocity decreases from the aorta to the arteries to capillaries.
As the blood moves through the aorta, the friction of the walls of the aorta decreases velocity. This velocity decrease results in a decrease in pressure.
i think arteries, capillaries, aorta just guessing
Can be veins, can be arteries, can be capillaries, can be the aorta..
superior vena cava
Capillaries
The resistance will increase
Blood flows the fastest as it exits the heart into the Aorta.
Pulmonary Vein