The Aorta is the main artery that supplies oxygenated blood to the body. The Aorta branches off into smaller arteries throughout the body which supply blood to the bodies cells. These vessels change over to veins which return the blood to the heart. With the exception of the Pulmonary artery which carries low oxygenated blood from the heart.
The left and right bronchial arteries supply blood to lung tissue. Don't confuse these with the pulmonary arteries. The pulmonary a.a. carry deoxygenated blood ultimately to the capillary network of the alveoli for gas exchange but these vessels DO NOT supply blood to the lungs themselves. And the key word is "supplies".
There are two left bronchial a.a. that arise from the superior surface of the thoracic aorta and a single right bronchial a., which can arise from either a posterior intercostal a. or from the superior left bronchial a. The bronchial a.a. branch off into bronchopulmonary a.a., which are different from the pulmobronchial a.a. that branch off the pulmonary a.a.
The superior Mesenteric artery
Vein and
carotid arteries
To provide the heart with a blood supply.
The Blood Vessel Carries Useful Materials To The Cells And Tissues Of The Body.
the process where nephrons are reabsorbed into the surrounding blood vessel is the blood cells
If the blood vessel is blocked , it then leads to a serious problem like a heart attack.
not directly but there are blood vessels in between fibers and blood cells are in the vessel.
the ascending aorta
No, a Capillary is a small blood vessel that delivers oxygen and other nutrients to cells.
Radial Artery
i think it is capillaries
Capillary
No, Plasma is the liquid solution that blood cells are suspended in.