Blood moves from the heart. The heart is a pump and it moves the blood to the lungs where it picks up oxygen. The blood carries oxygen by way of large arteries into smaller arteries, into even smaller arterioles, into capillary beds. At this point oxygen is lost into tissues (like muscles). The blood is now low on oxygen and must pick up more in the lungs. It also has to deliver carbon dioxide to the lungs. Back to the capillary bed, into very small venules and then larger veins and larger veins and even larger veins to the heart. Blood moves into the lungs and drops off carbon dioxide and picks up another load of oxygen and back down and around again. The Circulatory System with the heart as a pump.
no
multiunit smooth muscle are found in those areas and a few more.
The name of the blood vessel which supplies glucose and oxygen to the heart muscle is an artery. Arteries carry blood away from the heart.
No, muscle tissue doesn't produce any blood cells.
heart
Blood vessels are surrounded by smooth muscle. This is often known as visceral muscle. This type of muscle also lines the blood vessels and internal organs.
The type of blood flow that is needed for muscle tissue is skeletal muscle blood flow. Skeletal muscle blood flow is important for both voluntary and involuntary muscles.
the blood muscle
The smooth muscle type is associated with blood vessels. This muscle type is involuntary.
the left ventricle area of the heart is the thickest because it has to pump blood through out the entire body the atrial are thinner because the blood they pump does not have to travel as far.
NO.
270 ml/min!
Smooth muscle
in the blood
No. A form of involuntary muscle known as cardiac muscle pumps the blood through the heart.
This is not a question please rephrase.
The heart muscle is supplied by blood vessels called coronaries.