Tiny valves in your veins keep blood from backing up. The pumping force of your heart keeps the blood flowing forward. If a valve in your leg stops working properly, the blood seeping back causes varicose veins mainly in your legs, though can occur anywhere.
Pressure There are also one way valves in the circulatory system.
To prevent being shocked. Rubber is an insulator, and keeps electricity from flowing from the wire to you.
Plasma contains water, proteins, salts, nutrients, hormones and waste. So the job of the plasma in blood is to hold nutrients and other essentials needed in your body!:D
potentially if you have small vessel disease or an undiagnosed anyerism
Yes. Homeostasis keeps every thing in balance: you blood glucose level, your blood pressure, your body body temperature and more.
Arteries have no valves to prevent the blood from flowing backwards, but it is unnecessary when the heart keeps pumping. The blood pressure is highest when the blood is leaving the heart chamber into arteries -- the heart pumping keeps blood going one-way in the arteries.
it keeps your blood flowing
Pressure There are also one way valves in the circulatory system.
Your heart keeps your blood "flowing"
The heart is the organ that keeps the blood flowing. Valves in the heart ensure the flow is only in one direction.
A clot
These are valves, and are found in veins to prevent blood from flowing backwards.
it keeps blood flowing
One directional valves keep blood in the heart flowing in the right direction. There are three valves: biscupid valve, semilunar valve and tricuspid valve. These open to let the blood flow through then close to prevent the blood flowing back in the wrong direction making the heart less efficient.
Valves
dont fricken know
Blood vessels have valves that act like doors really. Also blood is pumped (pushed) out and around your body by each pump of your heart, each pump pushes more blood through, there is nowhere else to go but forward. It doesn't suck it back .