Red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, plasma, hormones, nutrients, wastes and ions.
Unoxygenated blood travels to the heart though the veins to be pumped to your lung capillaries. At you lung capillaries the blood becomes oxygenated and then goes back to the heart to pump oxygenated blood to the rest of your body. the capillaries blood travels though you arteries.
Arteries, Capillaries, and Veins.
The arteries are connected to the veins through capillaries. Blood leaves the heart through arteries, goes throughout the body, then by way of capillaries to the veins and returns to the heart.
Veins
arteries take blood away from heart. veins take blood to the heart. capillaries have thin walls
Capillaries are smaller, thinner and have less surface area than veins. Veins take blood to the heart, and capillaries are the thin tubes that connect the veins and arteries together.
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 3 types of blood vessels are: 1. veins, which carry blood to the heart; 2. capillaries, which connect veins and arteries, and 3. arteries, which carry blood away from the heart.
Arteries carry blood away from the heart, veins carry blood to the heart, and capillaries branch off of arteries and veins. Capillaries are essentially min-arteries and min-veins.
They are blood vessels
Arterioles carry blood in the direction away from the heart. The order of vessels from the heart is: arteries>arterioles>capillaries>venules>veins.
No, capillaries are what allows substances to go from the walls of the small intestine into your cells. Veins are what carry the blood (with cells inside) to the heart to be oxygenated.