The Renal vein/artery
Renal Arteries (to) and Renal Veins (from)
Renal
The coronary arteries carry blood to the muscle that makes up the heart but this blood comes directly from the large artery called the aorta.Otherwise arteries always carry blood way from the heart and veins carry it back. As far as if it they carry oxygen or not, veins carry blood back from the body without oxygen and back from the lungs with oxygen.
the aorta from the left ventricle and the pulmonary artery from the right ventricle. that's it.
Arteries. Or you might mean the aorta, the large artery coming directly out of the heart with others brancing from it.
Elastic (conducting) arteries are the large arteries close to the heart that expand during systole, acting as pressure reservoirs, and then recoil during diastole to keep blood moving. Muscular (distributing) arteries carry blood to specific organs; they are less stretchy and more active in vasoconstriction. Arterioles regulate blood flow into capillary beds.
Your arteries circulate the blood from your heart around your entire body. As large amounts of blood may be carried by your arteries they are susceptible to trauma and punctures that can make them release large amounts of blood. A puncture in any arteries is a very serious condition and should be immediately mediated.
arteries
The the abdominal, iliac, and femoral arteries.
No, arteries are not bones. Arteries are large blood vessels that carry oxygenated blood throughout the body.
Veins go to the heart and arteries go away. (General Yes)**Except for the pulmonary Arteries/Veins. When you consider oxygen and de-oxygenated blood.The pulmonary veins are large blood vessels that carry oxygenated blood from the lungs to the left atrium of the heart.The pulmonary arteries carry deoxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs.
The coronary arteries carry blood to the muscle that makes up the heart but this blood comes directly from the large artery called the aorta.Otherwise arteries always carry blood way from the heart and veins carry it back. As far as if it they carry oxygen or not, veins carry blood back from the body without oxygen and back from the lungs with oxygen.
the aorta from the left ventricle and the pulmonary artery from the right ventricle. that's it.
Away from it. Veins carry it back. Away from the heart. Arteries are the transportation systems of oxygen-rich blood to all of your body's cells. Veins, easily seen from their oxygen-starved blue color, carry oxygen-deprived blood cells to the heart, which pumps to the lungs to start the process over again with oxygen-rich blood cells.
You have the aorta, large and small arteries, capillaries and veins in the systemic circulation. You have the pulmonary aorta, arteries, capillaries and veins in the venous system. The blood pressure in the systemic circulation is much greater and hence the vessels are thicker there.
Arteries. Or you might mean the aorta, the large artery coming directly out of the heart with others brancing from it.
Elastic (conducting) arteries are the large arteries close to the heart that expand during systole, acting as pressure reservoirs, and then recoil during diastole to keep blood moving. Muscular (distributing) arteries carry blood to specific organs; they are less stretchy and more active in vasoconstriction. Arterioles regulate blood flow into capillary beds.
Your arteries circulate the blood from your heart around your entire body. As large amounts of blood may be carried by your arteries they are susceptible to trauma and punctures that can make them release large amounts of blood. A puncture in any arteries is a very serious condition and should be immediately mediated.
Most veins carry deoxygenated blood from the tissues back to the heart; exceptions are the pulmonary and umbilical veins, both of which carry oxygenated blood to the heart. The blood in the veins is not entirely without oxygen but is depleted to a large extent. Arteries ALWAYS carry blood AWAY from the heart and veins to the heart.