Renal vein
It is not renal vein. It is venules.
renal vein is only at one point of the body, were talking capillaries; which are all over the body.
Capillaries form veins which carry blood back to the heart
After the capillaries, blood flows into the smallest venules. Then it moves into progressively bigger veins until it reaches the right atrium.
Venules
venules
Yes... It leaves through your capillaries
The blood pressure is usually high when blood leaves the small arteries and enters the capillaries.
The blood pressure is usually high when blood leaves the small arteries and enters the capillaries.
venuoles
Blood leaves the glomerular capillaries via a second set of arterioles, the efferent arterioles, which deliver blood to the peritubular capillaries.
the lymhpatic system
Arteries go to arterioles, then the capillaries Arteries
Yes, capillaries form a network around the alveoli. It is through the alveolar walls and into the capillaries that oxygen enters the blood stream. Carbon dioxide leaves the blood by the reverse route.
carbon dioxide
97%
Arteries feed into capillaries, the capillaries give oxygen and nutrients to every cell in the body and take toxins and CO2 from every cell in the body, from there the blood in the capillaries go into your veins (the blue blood vessels) which go to your heart.
The capillaries.