The blood vessel you would expect a high glucose content in after eating is the portal system.
The aorta
systemic and pulmonary circuits
Systemic scleroderma, which is also called systemic sclerosis, affects the smaller blood vessels and internal organs of the body. Systemic sclerosis-- A rare disorder that causes thickening and scarring of multiple organ systems
All the blood vessels in your body. There are arteries, veins, and capillaries. Systemic crculation is the transport of blood and nutrients from the heart to the rest of the body.
(EGPA), is a rare systemic vasculitis (inflammation of the wall of blood vessels of the body), predominantly affecting small-sized vessels.
They start off the same, but by the time you're born they have begun to diverge. The systemic vessels are (self) forced to operate under a higher pressure than the pulmonary system and so develops arterioles plus thicker arterial walls.
The coronary circulation refers to the heart. The systemic circulation refers to the other vessels in the body.
Hypertonic solutions have more electrolytes....HYPER meaning greater/more/excessive. Hypotonic have the least electrolyes. Isotonic have the similar electroly (osmolality) as blood. Meaning if you give isotonic solutions, the fluid will saty in the vessels and not move fluids around. Hypertonic solutions will move water from the cells into the vessels (extracellualr) and hypotonic solution will move water from fluid from the vessels into the cells. Glucose is usually an iso or hypertonic solution, but there are different % of glucose in every solution. D5W is an isotonic solution.
The type known as localized scleroderma mainly affects the skin. Systemic scleroderma, which is also called systemic sclerosis, affects the smaller blood vessels and internal organs of the body.
yes - it means that they store/hold a lot of blood.
Pulmonary arteries
Systemic blood vessels. The ones that carry blood only to the lungs are called pulmonary vessels