ask someone else
You do not have a pulse in your veins and capillaries because the pulse is generated by the pressure wave created when the heart contracts and pumps blood into the arteries. Arteries are designed to withstand and transmit this high-pressure blood flow, resulting in a palpable pulse. In contrast, veins carry blood back to the heart at lower pressure, and capillaries are small vessels where the exchange of oxygen and nutrients occurs, lacking the ability to transmit a pulse.
it makes poo
no
capillaries
Because the cells of the the pulp cavity in which the blood capillaries are, produce dentin.
Veins don't have pulses, arteries have pulses. Arteries are blood supply tubes, veins are blood return tubes. Between the arteries and the veins blood passes through tiny tubes called capillaries. The pressure changes that cause the pulse can't pass through these tiny tubes.
Most porous capillaries are present in glomerulous in a Bowmans capsule of nephron .They help in filtration of blood . Tortuous nature of capillaries also helps in filtration .
No, they don't.Out of the 3 blood vessels: veins, arteries and capillaries, only the ARTERIES have a pulse. This pulse occurs because of the method the arteries use to pump blood. When you feel for a pulse on the neck, wrist etc... you are pressing the artery against bone which is how the rhythem is felt. Hope this helped :)
They are present in the lung surrounding the alveoli.
Well nothing, if the pulse is present the AED will not shock the casualty unless the signal changes (or the pulse stops). Treat for shock and await EMS
Yes, it's true. The beating of the heart only drives blood in the arteries. As the blood passes from the arteries to the capillaries and then to the veins, it ceases to be pumped by the heart, so no pulse can be felt. Blood in the veins returns to the heart because of the valves in the veins, and because of general muscular contractions in the body, rather than because of the heart.
Because the cells of the pulp cavity produce dentin.