this question is all mixed up. you must understand that blood leave the heart and goes to the body by travelling through the arteries(except the pulmonary artery) then is distributed to individual cells by the arteries then goes back to the heart through the veins(except the pulmonary vein).
so in the case of the heart cells, blood accesses the heart through the coronary artery, goes to the individual cardiac muscle cells by the capillaries and and then back to the hearth through to coronary vein.
Which vessels return blood to the heart?
Capillaries service cells, arteries and veins transport blood to and from capillaries, respectively.
Blood flows from the heart and aorta into large vessels called arteries, these arteries decrease in size as they move into tissues and are then called arterioles with just a few layers of cells. Arterioles then become capillaries that have a single cell layer. Capillaries then empty into venules, which then enter veins and return blood back to the heart to start the process over again!
capillaries actually aren't arteries. arteries, veins, and capillaries are the major blood transport networks. arteries take blood away from the heart, veins take it back, and capillaries go between the two. capillaries are the smallest of these networks tho
Blood distributes oxygen to the cells in the body. This allows the cells to carry out cellular respiration and carry out their processes.
Arteries, the largest of which is the Aorta. Arteries then split down into smaller blood vessels called arterioles and then smaller still into one-cell-thick vessels known as capillaries. These capillaries are where diffusion, movement of Oxygen from the blood vessels into the nearby tissue cells, occurs.
Arteries, capillaries, and veins. Arteries take blood away from the heart. Veins return blood to the heart. Capillaries are between the arteries and veins and supply the cells with oxygen and nutrients.
The brain has veins, capillaries, and arteries which contain blood cells.
The human circulatory system consists of arteries, veins, and capillaries. The capillaries are the thin-walled vessels that connect arteries and veins and allow for the exchange of materials between blood and tissue fluid.
Capillaries service cells, arteries and veins transport blood to and from capillaries, respectively.
Blood flows from the heart and aorta into large vessels called arteries, these arteries decrease in size as they move into tissues and are then called arterioles with just a few layers of cells. Arterioles then become capillaries that have a single cell layer. Capillaries then empty into venules, which then enter veins and return blood back to the heart to start the process over again!
They are blood vessels
Arteries carry oxygenated blood away from the heart, to the cells that need them. Veins carry blood containing carbon dioxide back to the heart after the oxygen has been given to the cells. Capillaries are the thinnest arteries and veins. They are only one cell wide. As the blood cell passes through the very thin capillary, the cells on either side are given oxygen and carbon dioxide is taken from them. Therefore, the capillaries connect the arteries and veins. Veins are thinner than arteries. Arteries are thicker than capillaries.
No, capillaries are not arteries. Capillaries very tiny vessels where food, waste, and gasses are transferred between the cells and blood. Arteries are large to moderate sized vessels that deliver blood from the heart to the capillaries.
capillaries
Heart- The heart pumps the blood throughout the body. Arteries- The arteries lead the blood away from the heart (arteries= away) Veins- The veins lead the blood to the heart Capillaries- The capillaries absorb the nutrients and oxygen Red Blood Cells- The red blood cells act as a transporter
Heart- The heart pumps the blood throughout the body. Arteries- The arteries lead the blood away from the heart (arteries= away) Veins- The veins lead the blood to the heart Capillaries- The capillaries absorb the nutrients and oxygen Red Blood Cells- The red blood cells act as a transporter
Capillaries, as they are the smallest blood vessels in the body, thus the need to "squeeze"