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They are known as the exocrine or duct glands
Typically, they are capillaries. Capillaries are the very small blood vessels that run the exchange between the arteries and veins - essentially facilitating the U-turn from the heart, back to the heart. Capillaries are very small, only allowing a single file of blood cells to pass through them.
so they go faster
The blood cells are in the capillaries and are moved along in the capillaries. Your question makes no sense.
Arteries and veins are both in the same size range (which goes from more than an inch across to too small to be seen). Capillaries run about 4 microns - or half the diameter of a red blood cell (which must fold in order to get through them - thus the significance of sickle cell disease).
1,200
The chambers of the heart function as a pump; they do not utilize the blood that passes through because it is moving far too quickly and turbulently. Blood must run through capillaries at lower speeds/volumes in order to be used by cells. The coronary arteries branch repeatedly to produce a vast network of capillaries that supply the cardiac muscle cells.
it runs through 6 counties
No as well as normal red blood cells. The problems don't usually start occurring until the cells get to the capillaries. Normal red blood cells are slightly larger than the capillaries, and they are able to squeeze ever so slightly and move through the capillaries. In sickle cells, the deformities of shape is attributed to a decrease in this ability. They lose flexibility and often are completely unsuitable in size and shape to pass through certain capillaries; leading to many getting stuck. Certain organs can run into problems with these cells as well such as the spleen, which can cause overwhelming ischemia. Most of the larger blood vessels will generally not present with problems due to movement of sickle cells.
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None! they have no legs
None.