Pulmonary arteries
bronchial arteries
apoxia
The coronary arteries carry blood to the heart tissue, such as the myocardium. These vessels are part of the systemic circulation.
cortical radiate arteries
Muscle tissue and blood vessels both use fibroblasts, a precursor for the smooth muscle cells that stabilize the blood vessels. One difference is that the muscle tissue requires oxygenated blood in order to function.
Every living tissue requires blood for it's survival, so does blood vessels, great vessels even have small vessels to supply themselves and they are called as "Vasa vasorum"
All organs have blood vessels as they all need a supply of blood to be viable
Simplified answer: Oxygenated blood reaches the brain via the Internal Cerebral Artery and the Vertebral Arteries. These vessels have many branches (Posterior, Middle, and Anterior Cerebral Arteries) going to different parts of the brain. Once oxygen reaches the capillary beds of these vessels it diffuses through the capillary walls to supply brain tissue.
Yes. Bones need a blood supply as much as any other tissue.
Blood is oxygenated in the lungs travels through the pulmonary veins into the heart. The heart muscle itself receives oxygenated blood through through the coronary arteries that branch off from the aorta.
whereas most tissue are vascular (contain blood vessels), epithelium is avascular, meaning it lacks blood vessels. epithelial cells receive their nutrients from capillaries in the underlying connective tissue. although blood vessels do not penetrate epithelial sheets, nerve endings do; that is, epithelium is innervated (supply organ with nerve).
It depends on how big your body is. The larger you are the more blood vessels you have to supply the tissue. It is estimated that an extra 200 miles of blood vessels develop for each extra pound of fat.
It attacks connective tissue