Efferent arteriole takes the blood away from the glomerulus
the efferent arteriole takes blood away from the glomerulus
efferent arteriole or afferent arteriole
Afferent arteriole.
efferent
Renal vein
Blood enters the glomerulus through the afferent arteriole and drains through the efferent arteriole.
The efferent arteriole.
Glomerulus capillary
afferent arteriole
Veins are the type of blood vessel that drains blood from tissues and returns it to the heart.
The blood vessel that carries blood to the glomerulus is called the afferent vessel. But the glomerulus is not close ended nad the vessel that leaves it, called the efferent vessel, carries on beside the nephron and collects the components that are reabsorbed.
Ans: Different arteriole the different arteriole carries blood from the branch of the renal artery into the glomerulus, the different arteriole carries blood away from the glomerulus and back into the branch of the anal vein.
it drains blood from the nerve cord n' stuff :)
Afferent Arteriole carries blood into the Glomerulus, the Efferent Arteriole carries blood away.
The single vessel that drains blood from the digestive tract organs to the liver is the hepatic portal vein. Blood flow to the liver is unique, in that it receives both oxygenated and partially deoxygenated blood.
The afferent arteriole feeds directly into the glomerulus.
Hydrostatic pressure. The vessel draining the glomerulus has a smaller internal diameter than the vessel feeding it. This means that blood doesn't exit the glomerulus as quickly as it enters. This creates a pressure, called hydrostatic pressure, within the glomerular capillaries and that pressure forces the fluids and many solutes into the glomerular capsule surrounding the glomerulus.