The liver receives a dual blood supply from the hepatic portal vein and hepatic arteries. Supplying approximately 75% of the liver's blood supply, the hepatic portal vein carries venous blood drained from the spleen, gastrointestinal tract, and its associated organs. The hepatic arteries supply arterial blood to the liver, accounting for the remainder of its blood flow. Oxygen is provided from both sources; approximately half of the liver's oxygen demand is met by the hepatic portal vein, and half is met by the hepatic arteries.[5]
Blood flows through the sinusoids and empties into the central vein of each lobule. The central veins coalesce into hepatic veins, which leave the liver and empty into the inferior vena cava.
The kidneys receive blood from the renal arteries, left and right, which branch directly from the abdominal aorta. Despite their relatively small size, the kidneys receive approximately 20% of the cardiac output.[2]
Each renal artery branches into segmental arteries, dividing further into interlobar arteries which penetrate the renal capsule and extend through the renal columns between the renal pyramids. The interlobar arteries then supply blood to the arcuate arteries that run through the boundary of the cortex and the medulla. Each arcuate artery supplies several interlobular arteries that feed into the afferent arterioles that supply the glomeruli.
After filtration occurs the blood moves through a small network of venules that converge into interlobular veins. As with the arteriole distribution the veins follow the same pattern, the interlobular provide blood to the arcuate veins then back to the interlobar veins which come to form the renal vein exiting the kidney for transfusion for blood.
The hilum is the medial depression in the kidney where the blood and lymph vessels and nerves enter.
The smooth muscle type is associated with blood vessels. This muscle type is involuntary.
heart or kidney
on the concave side of the kidney , which faces the vertebral column, lies a depressin called Hilus. it provides a placefr the renal vessels, nerves and the ureter to enter or leave the kidney.
Inter lobar Arteries.
cortical radiate arteries
on the concave side of the kidney , which faces the vertebral column, lies a depressin called Hilus. it provides a placefr the renal vessels, nerves and the ureter to enter or leave the kidney.
on the concave side of the kidney , which faces the vertebral column, lies a depressin called Hilus. it provides a placefr the renal vessels, nerves and the ureter to enter or leave the kidney.
The bunch of looped capillary blood vessels in a Malpighian capsule of the kidney.
Julia Fourman has written: 'The blood vessels of the kidney' -- subject(s): Blood-vessels, Kidneys, Renal artery, Renal veins
Glomerulus- tiny ball of capillaries(microscopic blood vessels) in the kidney.
capillaries