true
Venule.
capillaries or blood vessels
Capillaries are blood vessels in the body that help transfer nutrients and waste between blood and tissue. They connect two other blood vessels, the arteriole and the venule.
Capillaries send blood to both arteries and veins.
these are not called blood tubes they are called blood vessels and their are three types of blood vessels arteries which divides into arterioles and arterioles re divide into capillaries capillaries join to form venule and venule join to form veins.
The blood vessels in between arteries and veins are the capillaries. But, they do not link them together, rather, they both have openings, through their capillaries, into the interstitial space which is the space between the cells of the tissues of the body.
Heart > artery > arteriole > capillary > venule > vein > heart
Venules are the microscopic vessels that continue from the capillaries and merge to form veins. Veins carry blood back to the atria, leading to the heart...
Capillaries
The systemic arteriole, then the capillaries, the venule, the vein, the vena cava, the heart, the pulmonary artery, the pulmonary arterioles, capillaries, the pulmonary veins, the heart, into the aorta, and back into the artery.
The smallest vessels in the human body are capillaries. They are the blood vessels that absorb oxygen into the blood and returning blood cells that lack oxygen back into the heart and lungs to be oxidised.
Arteries divide into smaller vessels called Arteriols. Arteriols subdivide into even smaller vessels called capillaries, where oxygen, nutrients, hormones are delivered to the tissues of the body. Waste products are also picked up by capillaries and delivered to venules which grow into larger vessels called veins. Veins deliver deoxygenated blood back to the heart.