Arteries are blood vessels that carry oxygenated blood in the lungs to the tissues of the body.
Veins are blood vessels that carry deoxygenated blood (venous blood) filled with waste products from the body tissues to the heart and lungs.
You cannot generally take a pulse from a vein.
it is a VEIN <3
Artery.
there is no such animal as an artery vein.... you have artery and you have veins... no vessel is both, unless used in a CABG.
It's a vein. The artery going to your head is the carotid artery.
segmental artery, renal artery, renal vein, arcule vein, interlobular vein, interlobular artery
the wall of an artery is usuallythicker that the wall of a vein.
artery
Yes, because there is more pressure in the artery than in the vein so the artery has to be big enough to hold the pressure that's inside it.
in our body there are both, pulmonary artery and pulmonary vein
Some of the vessels are the basilar artery, internal carotid artery, external carotid artery,, external jugular vein, internal jugular vein, vertebral arteries, common carotid arteries, pulmonary arteries, pulmonary veins, heart, celiac trunk, hepatic vein, renal veins, gonadal vein, common iliac vein, common iliac artery, internal iliac artery, and internal iliac vein. Other vessels are great saphenous vein, femoral artery, femoral vein, popliteal artery, popliteal vein, and small saphenous vein.
The renal artery takes blood to the kidney. The renal vein takes blood away from the kidney. In the kidney, the waste product urea is filtered out of the blood. So the main difference is in the amount of urea in the blood: high in the renal artery and low in the renal vein.